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Tlatilco  Female Figurine Tlatilco  Female Figurine

Tlatilco Female Figurine - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2018-02-07

Tlatilco Female Figurine - PPT Presentation

Makeba Phillip Mikayla Colbourne Sidney Rhoton Christopher Segarra Period 4 ID: 628957

female figures artists figurine figures female figurine artists hair piece 900 hairstyles religious form passed people time 1200 duality

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Slide1

Tlatilco Female Figurine

Makeba Phillip, Mikayla Colbourne, Sidney Rhoton, Christopher SegarraPeriod 4

Era: 1200-900 BCE

Location: Central MexicoSlide2

Form

This figure is a ceramic piece with pigment.The artists show no care for the hands or feet, but pay special attention to elaborate hair styles.Has a very smooth surface, but the hair is textured with vertical lines.This piece is differentiated from others and non-naturalistic due to the form of the body including the lack of arms along with big thighs.This work also emphasizes an expression of duality. Slide3

Content

The figurine is a two-headed female figureThe figurine can range in size, but normally they are small scale and have tiny breasts and waists.The artists treated the hairstyles with extreme care and delicacy, which suggested that hair was very important to the people.They had attenuated limbs and occasionally disturbing facial features. Slide4

Context

From the same region as the Aztec EmpireLively poses and intricate hairstyles indicate sophisticated artistic traditionCreated between 1200-900 B.C.EThe makers lived in large farming villages near the great inland lake, so they used nearby materials.The females have religious roles in this society, although specifics are unknown.The skills to make figures such as these were passed down and mastered over generations (Cultural ties)

Fascination with physical deformities in the cultureSlide5

Function

People believed that the two heads could be an expression of duality.Male figures hold a high role in religion, the female figures are less religious but its likely that it is still present. Scholars doubted that there were full time artists at this point in time. Craftsmanship was more of a skill used for survival and the tradition was passed down.

These figures were often associated with fertility and maternity. Similar figures were often found in burials accompanying the deceased in afterlife.Slide6

Vocab.

Bicephalic: Two-headedSedentary: Abiding in one place; not migratory.Attentuated: Reduced especially in thickness, density, or force.