Las Limas Monument 1 Explained

Las Limas Monument 1
Material:Greenstone
Created:Middle Formative Period (1000 BCE – 600 BCE)
Height:55cm (22inches)
Discovered Date:1965
Discovered Place:near Jesús Carranza, Veracruz, Mexico
Location:Xalapa Museum of Anthropology, Veracruz
Culture:Olmec

Las Limas Monument 1, also known as the Las Limas figure or the Señor de las Limas, is a 55cm (22inches) greenstone figure of a youth holding a limp were-jaguar baby. Found in the State of Veracruz, Mexico, in the Olmec heartland, the statue is famous for its incised representations of Olmec supernaturals. It is the largest known greenstone sculpture.[1]

Interpretation

Sculptures of headdressed figures holding inert were-jaguar babies appear often in the Olmec archaeological record, from the smallest of figurines to the huge table-top thrones such as La Venta Altar 5.

What these sculptures symbolised to the Olmecs is not clear. Some researchers, focusing on the symbolic cave surrounding the figure on Altar 5 believe that these sculptures relate to myths of spiritual journeys or human origins. Others find that the limp depiction of the were-jaguar baby denotes child sacrifice.[2]

History

The statue is 55cm (22inches) high, 42cm (17inches) wide, and weighs an estimated 60kg (130lb). It was probably carved during the Middle Formative Period, some time between 1000 and 600 BCE).[3]

The statue was discovered 16 July 1965 in near Jesús Carranza, Veracruz, by two local children, Rosa and Severiano Paschal Manuel. Dug out and taken to their nearby home, it was declared "La Virgen de las Limas" and set up on its own altar. Word of the find reached archaeologists in Xalapa. After promising to keep the statue on display and to build a local school, the archaeologists moved the sculpture to the Xalapa Museum of Anthropology, in Veracruz.[4]

Five years later, in October 1970, the statue was stolen from the museum, only later to be found in a motel room in San Antonio, Texas; it had been apparently too famous to be sold on the black market.[5] It was subsequently restored to display at the Xalapa Museum of Anthropology.

Sources

. Miller, Mary Ellen . Mary Miller (art historian) . 2001 . The Art of Mesoamerica . 3rd. London . . 0-500-20345-8.

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Miller, p. 31.
  2. Pool, p. 116.
  3. Pool, p. 116.
  4. Diehl, p. 58.
  5. Navarro. See also Journal of Field Archaeology, p. 217.