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Tuhinga

Taitara

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

Whistling vessel

#1631

Maya artist(s)

400–500 CE

Ceramic

Whakaahuatanga

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)

Additional Information

Ngā Ahu
H. 11 7/8 x W. 7 3/4 x D. 5 1/4 in. (30.2 x 19.7 x 13.3 cm)
Whiwhinga
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1963
Tau Whakauru
1978.412.90a, b

Ngā Raihana Pūmanawa