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Tuhinga

Taitara

  • A photograph of a detailed wooden sculpture and the words Arts of The Ancient Americas on a green background.

Host figure

#1633

Maya artist(s)

550–650 CE

Ceramic, pyrite, pigment

Whakaahuatanga

This hollow male figure with unusually long hair and a removable chest plate sits cross-legged, wearing only large earplugs and strands of beads. His conventionalized face, once painted red and with evidence of past inlays in the eyes and teeth, is similar to those of the greenstone masks nearby. The internal cavity “hosts” small, mold-made flowers and figurines—including warriors with shields, headdresses, and butterfly-shaped nose plugs—all meant to be seen when the chest plate was removed during rituals.  

Host figures are more commonly found in burials and offerings in Teotihuacan, but some have been recovered from as far away as West Mexico, Yucatán, and Guatemala. This example comes from the Pacific coast of Guatemala, underscoring the widespread connections that this powerful city had with other parts of Mesoamerica. 

1633. Host figure, Teotihuacan or Maya artist(s)

David Carballo and Oswaldo Chinchilla

Additional Information

Ngā Ahu
H. 14 3/4 × W. 10 3/4 × D. 10 1/4 in. (37.5 × 27.3 × 26 cm)
Whiwhinga
Partial and Promised Gift of Linda M. Lindenbaum, from the Collection of Samuel H. and Linda M. Lindenbaum, 2015
Tau Whakauru
2015.226a, b

Ngā Raihana Pūmanawa