View full screen - View 1 of Lot 15. Colima Figure of a Contortionist, Comala Style, Protoclassic, circa 100 BC - AD 250.

Property from the Estate of Patsy R. Taylor

Colima Figure of a Contortionist, Comala Style, Protoclassic, circa 100 BC - AD 250

Lot Closed

December 4, 05:15 PM GMT

Estimate

15,000 - 20,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Property from the Estate of Patsy R. Taylor

Colima Figure of a Contortionist, Comala Style

Protoclassic, circa 100 BC - AD 250


Height: 10 1/4 in (26 cm); Length: 11 1/2 in (29.2 cm)

Edward H. Merrin, New York
Gray and Patsy R. Taylor, Greenwich, acquired from the above on February 24, 1971
The Bruce Museum, Greenwich, Life, Death and the Afterlife in Ancient Mexico, April 19 - November 3, 1991
The Art Institute of Chicago, Ancient West Mexico: Art and Archaeology of the Unknown Past, September 5, 1998 - November 22, 1998; additional venue: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, December 20, 1998 - March 29, 1999
Richard F. Townsend, ed., Ancient West Mexico: Art and Archaeology of the Unknown Past, Chicago, 1998, p. 30, fig. 23, cat. no. 22
The acrobat vessels are tour de force ceramic compositions. The contortionist was an important ritual performer in village events, perhaps signifying mythological "diving" and underworld travel, as much as a providing a form of entertainment. Acrobat figures were made as small solid figurines in the early Protoclassic, and continued into the Mixtec Postclassic period.

This figure is closely related to the acrobat figure, sold at Replica Shoes ’s, New York, May 7, 2016, lot 132 (illustrated in Richard F. Townsend, ed., Ancient West Mexico: Art and Archaeology of the Unknown Past, Chicago, 1998, p. 30, fig. 24, cat. no. 23).