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AZTEC ART 1325-1521

Aztec Art- Art 216

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Page 1: Aztec Art- Art 216

AZTEC ART 1325-1521

Page 2: Aztec Art- Art 216

CUAUHTLI-CUAUHXICAL

LI, (EAGLE GOURD VESSEL)

Literally meaning "eagle gourd vessel" the cuauhxicalli was the vessel in which the Aztecs made their most sacred offerings, human hearts. Real gourds, as finely as carved stone objects, may have been used as cuauhxicallis at the time of the Conquest.

Page 3: Aztec Art- Art 216

TEMPLE STONE

represents the Aztecs as the legitimate power in the Valley of Mexico.combines elements of a temple and a royal throneThe entire monument symbolizes the Aztec capital Tenochtitlan, rising from Lake Tetzcoco. For the Aztecs, a main temple of a city represented the city’s symbol. Temples were shaped in the form of pyramids symbolizing the mountains, where fertility and creation happens, where the wombs of creation are kept. May have been used as an actual throne for Moctezuma II. Bas reliefs include: Aztec solar disk, Huitzilopochtli, gods and human kings drawing autosacrifice.

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• Back: the eagle standing on a cactus that emerges from the reclining body of a goddess and with lines behind that suggest water, is an elaborate version of the name glyph for Tenochtitlan.

• The glyph 2 House on the top of the monument is for 1325, the traditional founding date of Tenochtitlan.

• The whole monument therefore represents the city of Tenochtitlan, rising from lake Texcoco.

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STONE OF THE SUN 10 feet in diameter X 3 feet thickMedium: Basalt Weight: 25 tons. • Monument to the Sun• Represents human sacrifice

related to the cult of Tonatiuh, god of the Sun

• Representation of the 5th Sun that we currently live in, which was created in Teotihuacan.

• Symbolizes the destruction of the Fifth Sun and acts as a celebration for the creation of the world where the forces of creation and destruction play equal roles.

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• Center: Tonatiuh • Four flanges show the

names of the four previous creations, Four Jaguar, Four Wind, Four Rain, Four Water

• Adjacent to the flanges, the four cardinal directions

• 20 days of the month are shown

• Two fire serpents that encompass the Sun stone.

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Page 8: Aztec Art- Art 216

STONE OF TIZOC

The stone depicts the victories of Tizoc, the emperor during 1481-86, and is a masterpiece of intricate stone carving. These stones were probably used for gladiator sacrifices of important captured warriors. Also used as a cuauhxicallis, where the hearts of the sacrificed victims were deposited. King Tizoc is depicted as the god Tezcatlipoca and his conquests are glorified in stone. Tizoc is the only person wearing a hummingbird helmet of the god Huitzilopochtli. The frieze between the two borders portrays 15 Aztec warriors holding captive victims by the hair. The top of the cylinder is a sun disk with 8 rays.

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AZTEC COMBAT ON THE TIZOC SACRIFICIAL STONE

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COATILCUE, THE EARTH GODDESS*

Coatilcue= she who wear a skirt snakeHeight= 9ft tall. Monumental sculpture Depictions of Coatlicue are fairly rare in Aztec art. Standing on huge taloned feet, Coatlicue wears a dress of woven rattlesnakes. Her pendulous breasts are partially obscured behind a grisly necklace of severed hearts and hands. Writhing coral snakes appear in place of her head and hands, denoting gouts of blood gushing from her throat and wrists. The two great snakes emerging from her neck face one another, creating a face of living blood. A monument of cosmic terror, Coatlicue stands violated and mutilated, her wounds mutely demanding revenge against her enemies.

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THE HEAD OF

COYOLXAUHQUI, THE

MOON GODDESS • In this case, Coyolxauhqui is represented as a lifeless severed head.

• As in the case of the intact disk from Templo Mayor, she displays on her cheeks the coyolli bells for which she is named.

• Flowing down her nose is blood stylized as serpents. This probably refers to a necessity to feed the gods with human sacrifice provided by warfare.

• This piece is a complete statue.

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XOCHIPILLI GOD OF

FLOWERSThe Aztec god of flowers, music, dance and feasting. Whether the statue depicts a priest wearing the mask of Xochipilli or whether the statue depicts the god himself is unclear. His posture suggests he is a hypnotical trance of hallucinogenic ecstasy. The carvings on his knees and the pedestal are the glyphs of the teonanacatl, the sacred hallucinogenic mushrooms. Other parts of his body have representations of other enteogenic flowers like tobacco. On the sides of the pedestals are blossoming flowers with butterflies drinking the nectar in the center representing the blossoming of the universe.

Xotchil= flowers

Page 13: Aztec Art- Art 216
Page 14: Aztec Art- Art 216

QUETZALCOATL

This sculpture portrays a snake in a coiled position with its jaw fully opened to reveal the sharpness of its teeth. This figure represents Quetzalcoatl. The feathered serpent gave humans the knowledge of agriculture and of art, fundamental for their survival and the development of their soul, and the piece pays homage to his role in fertility, renewal and transformation.

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HUEHUETEOTL

OLD FIRE GOD

One of the most ancient deities of Mesoamerica. He is always portrayed, like in this image, as a seated god with the hands on the knees, the right hand opened, and the left hand closed like a first. His face is wrinkled and his mouth is toothless just like an old man. His face is almost hidden by a mask and his mouth has fangs, he has a great necklace with a large pendant that adorns the chest, and he also has big ear-flares.

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SCULPTURE OF EAGLE WARRIOR

The Eagle knights were associated with the sun and with daytime battles. Their job as to nourish the sun by sacrificing their own blood, thus making them resistant to pain and capable of risking their own life unconditionally. -young warrior with an eagle helmet, would have been covered with eagle feathers and made out of wood. This sculpture shows the Aztec ideal facial feature. The eyes might have been inlaid with shells, and dog’s teeth might have been inserted into the holes in his mouth. The dog’s fangs were probably used to intimidate others and show the warrior’s ferocity and strength.

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AZTEC ATLANTEAN WARRIOR

This group of five colossal sculptures of warriors represent the Aztec vision of the universe, inspired by the famous Toltec Atlantes of Tula. They represent the fourth cardinal directions. They represent warriors who support the creations of the gods by military actions. They have the butterfly pectoral of the Toltec warriors.

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EAGLE WARRIOR

CLAY SCULPTURE • life-size images of men wearing eagle costumes which were found flanking the entrance to the Great Temple complex. –

• Very few human-scale clay images are known from Mesoamerica

• Each figure was made in four sections.• Eagle claws were modeled on the

calves of the figure, while remains of the white clay on the upper leg area represented feathered warriors.

• The two leading military orders in Aztec society, the Jaguar Knights and Eagle Knights, were made up of the bravest soldiers of noble birth and those who had taken the greatest number of prisoners in battle.

• The "Eagles" were soldiers of the sun, for the eagle was the symbol of the sun.

Page 19: Aztec Art- Art 216

MICTLANCIHUATLI

GOD OF THE DEAD

• Mictlantecuhtli lived in a damp and cold place known as Mictlan, which was the underworld, a universal womb where human remains were kept.

• The god is shown wearing a loincloth and small holes in his scalp indicate that at one time, curly human hair decorated his head.

• His claw-like hands are poised as if ready to attack someone.

• Most dramatically, he is represented with his flesh wide-open below his chest where a giant liver appears.

• According to the Aztec, they believed that the liver was where the human soul dwells.

Page 20: Aztec Art- Art 216

XIPE TOTEC

Xipe Totec was the god of vegetation and agricultural renewal. For his celebration sacrificed bodies were flayed and priests wore the skins for 20 days. He is depicted in the sculpture as a man with a flayed skin. A rope, sculpted in detail, ties the skin at the back, head, and chest. This piece forms part of a series of great images created by Pre-Columbian artists, who expressed their deeply held belief that only through death can life exist.

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TLALOC VASE

To the Aztecs, Tlaloc was known as "the provider" and depending on the rains, could be either generous or miserly. One of the Dual temples upon the Templo Mayor of Tenochtitlan was dedicated to Tlaloc, and this side of the pyramid was apparently considered as his mountain abode. Tlaloc, the rain and lightning god of the Aztecs, is one of the most common deities at Teotihuacan and often appears with lightning, maize, and water. Tlaloc typically has goggled eyes and large, jaguar teeth or fangs.

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FUNERARY URN WITH IMAGE OF TEZCATLIPOCA Tezcatlipoca (smoking mirror) is the protector of warriors, kings and sorcerers. Contains the cremated bones of Aztec warriors who probably died in battle against the Tarascans of Michoacán. A necklace of beads, a spear point, and a bone perforator were also inside. On the urn lies the image of Tezcatlipoca surrounded by a feathered serpent with a forked tongue. Wearing a headdress full of eagle feathers, symbols connected to the sun, the deity seems to be armed and ready for battle.

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PENACHO DE

MOCTEZUMABecause of their role in elite and ritual costumes, quetzal feathers were an important element in Mesoamerica. The famous headdress housed in Vienna that is often called Moctezuma's Headdress included 500 hundred quetzal feathers. Other evidence indicates that such headdresses existed and were part of royal or ritual regalia; on the Stone of Tizoc the ruler shown in the battle dress wears a hummingbird helmet with a great quetzal-feather crown. Amanteca- feather workers***

Page 24: Aztec Art- Art 216
Page 25: Aztec Art- Art 216

AHUITZOL SHIELD

(FEATHERED SHIELD) Shield was a gift from Hernan Cortes

to a bishop in Spain. Its an assemblage of different types of feathers, including feathers from scarlet macaws, blue cotingas, rose spoonbills and yellow orioles, tassels of feathers hang from the lower edge. Vegetable fibers hold together the base of reed splints that supports the colorfully arranged plumage. The shield portrays the figure of Coyotl warrior in gold and feathers. The coyote was associated to warfare and military Aztec order. Fire Water comes pouring out of his mouth indicating that he is shouting a call or song of war.

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DOUBLE HEADED

TURQUOISE SERPENT

PECTORAL associated with Quetzalcoatl. Their jaws are open, symbolizing the caves of Mictlan, gateways to the underworld. The whole piece is a wooden base covered with turquoise mosaic inlays making it look as blue as the sky. The noses, gums, and teeth of the reptiles are inlaid with white and red shells. Double headed and intertwined serpents were icons in Mesoamerican art that represented the sky. The serpents were a symbol of renewal since they shed their skin. It is believed that a priest or noble wore this pectoral in rituals connected to the birth of Huitzilopochtli.

Page 27: Aztec Art- Art 216
Page 28: Aztec Art- Art 216

ANTHROMORPHIC FLINT/

SACRIFICIAL KNIVESThe personified flint knives with

faces on both sides were symbolic of sacrifice. This particular knife is decorated with applied pieces of turquoise, obsidian, and shell arranged as teeth and eyes on a painted blade. Knives were recovered from Offering 52 on the Huitzilopochtli side of the Templo Major. Offerings to Huitzilopochtli contained a variety of items symbolic of power and strength. The offering included symbols of human, knives, and human skulls