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  • Whistling vessel, Maya artist(s), Ceramic, Maya

Whistling vessel

#1631

Maya artist(s)

400–500 CE

Ceramic

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Potters from the regions now identified as northern Guatemala and southern Campeche, Mexico, created this distinctive ceramic style, characterized by its exceptionally fine clay, reddish-black slip, and highly polished surface. A supernatural bird perched on one chamber of this double vessel faces a kneeling young man on the other; a third creature climbs up the center. The man’s submissive position suggests he is luring the bird—an avian manifestation of the old god Itzamnaaj—into a trap. A whistle inside the head of the bird sounds when water is poured into the vessel’s opposite chamber.

1631. Whistling vessel, Maya artist(s)

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Qhov ntev
H. 11 7/8 x W. 7 3/4 x D. 5 1/4 in. (30.2 x 19.7 x 13.3 cm)
Qhuas
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1963
Tus lej nkag
1978.412.90a, b

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