Maya Tripod Bowl

Illustration

Ibolya Horvath
by Metropolitan Museum of Art
published on 16 April 2018
Maya Tripod Bowl Download Full Size Image

3-4th century CE, Guatemala, Mesoamerica.
Metropolitan Museum of Art

A favored vessel type of the Maya lowlands was one made in the shape of a tropical bird, perhaps a cormorant, in the act of catching a fish in its beak. The bird's forehead is marked with a disk, probably depicting a mirror. Details of the bird are rendered on the lid, where its head forms the knob and its wings spread out onto the expanse of the lid. The fish is rendered three-dimensionally, carefully held in the wide bird beak. The bowl beneath the lid forms the body of the bird. In monochrome versions of the theme, as seen here, details are incised; in polychrome examples, they are multicolored. The symbolic meaning of the theme is not clear, even though it remains constant on the lids of a number of different bird-bowl types, from those without feet to four-footed examples. As these bowls have been found in some burials, the theme may relate to death and/or the afterlife, or, more simply, to the presumed contents of the vessel.

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APA Style

Art, M. M. o. (2018, April 16). Maya Tripod Bowl. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/image/8620/maya-tripod-bowl/

Chicago Style

Art, Metropolitan Museum of. "Maya Tripod Bowl." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified April 16, 2018. https://www.worldhistory.org/image/8620/maya-tripod-bowl/.

MLA Style

Art, Metropolitan Museum of. "Maya Tripod Bowl." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 16 Apr 2018. Web. 19 Apr 2024.

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