Keywords: Jalisco - Mother and Child - Walters 20092015 - Bottom.jpg A mother proudly supports her male child who with her help stands securely on her lap She sits in the proper position for women legs folded to the side and concealed below her wrap skirt This cream-slipped sculpture was made during the culmination of the shaft tomb tradition in West Mexico when tombs were filled with spirited figural sculptures and decorated pottery vessels and the bodies of the deceased were dressed in fine clothing and jewelry of shell and stone The figures' cream-slipped surface and the restrained painting with which her dress is depicted are characteristic of an artistic substyle of the famous El Arenal Brown sculptural tradition of northern Jalisco Jalisco's pottery sculptors created a vast array of figures portraying all manner of social and political personages The figures are famous for the renderings of warriors brandishing shields and club-weapons and wearing helmets and armor of cotton batting Others portray members of the ruling elite majestically standing with staff of office in hand Shamans and healing rites were frequently depicted as were individuals afflicted with diseases or congenital deformities Portrayals of women were equally prominent the majority featuring either their political or spiritual shamanic powers or their magical ability to create life in the form of children This sculpture is a particularly informal yet stately expression of the procreative power of women and their lifelong calling as nurturers 100 BC-AD 200 earthenware white slip with black and red paint cm 37 2 30 9 23 2 accession number 2009 20 15 80170 Michael Robins date and mode of acquisition unknown John G Bourne 1990s mode of acquisition unknown Walters Art Museum Gift of John Bourne 2009 place of origin Jalisco Mexico Walters Art Museum license Pottery from ancient Jalisco in the Walters Art Museum Art of Mexico Media contributed by the Walters Art Museum needs category review Statues of mothers with children |