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Olmec figurine

Olmec figurines are archetypical figurines produced by the Formative Period inhabitants of Mesoamerica. While not all of these figurines were produced in the Olmec heartland, they bear the hallmarks and motifs of Olmec culture. While the extent of Olmec control over the areas beyond their heartland is not yet known, Formative Period figurines with Olmec motifs were widespread in the centuries from 1000 to 500 BC, showing a consistency of style and subject throughout nearly all of Mesoamerica.

A selection of tiny naturalistic Olmec ceramic figurines from the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The hunchback at center is less than 3 inches (7.6 cm) tall.
An archetypical baby-face figurine from Las Bocas.

These figurines are usually found in household refuse, ancient construction fill, and, outside the Olmec heartland, graves.[1][2] However, many Olmec-style figurines, particularly those labelled as Las Bocas- or Xochipala-style, were recovered by looters and are therefore without provenance.

The vast majority of figurines are simple in design, often nude or with a minimum of clothing, and made of local terracotta. Most of these recoveries are mere fragments: a head, arm, torso, or a leg.[3] It is thought, based on wooden busts recovered from the water-logged El Manati site, that figurines were also carved from wood, but, if so, none have survived.

More durable and better known by the general public are those figurines carved, usually with a degree of skill, from jade, serpentine, greenstone, basalt, and other minerals and stones.

Baby-face figurines edit

The "baby-face" figurine is a unique marker of Olmec culture, consistently found in sites that show Olmec influence,[4] although they seem to be confined to the early Olmec period and are largely absent, for example, in La Venta.[5]

These ceramic figurines are easily recognized by the chubby body, the baby-like jowly face, downturned mouth, and the puffy slit-like eyes. The head is slightly pear-shaped, likely due to artificial cranial deformation.[6] They often wear a tight-fitting helmet not dissimilar to those worn by the Olmec colossal heads.[7] Baby-face figurines are usually naked, but without genitalia.[8] Their bodies are rarely rendered with the detail shown on their faces.

Also called "hollow babies", these figurines are generally from 25–35 cm (9.8–13.8 in) high[9] and feature a highly burnished white- or cream-slip. They are only rarely found in archaeological context.[10]

Archaeologist Jeffrey Blomster divides baby-face figurines into two groups based on several features. Among the many distinguishing factors, Group 1 figurines more closely mirror the characteristics of Gulf Coast Olmec artifacts. Group 2 figurines are also slimmer than those of Group 1, lacking the jowly face or fleshy body, and their bodies are larger in proportion to their heads.[11]

Given the sheer numbers of baby-face figurines unearthed, they undoubtedly fulfilled some special role in the Olmec culture. What they represented, however, is not known. Michael Coe, says "One of the great enigmas in Olmec iconography is the nature and meaning of the large, hollow, whiteware babies".[12]

 
An "elongated man" figurine, dark green serpentine. Inlays, since lost, once animated the eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.[13]

Elongated man edit

Another common figurine style features standing figurines in a stiff artificial pose and characterized by their thin limbs, elongated, bald, flat-topped heads, almond-shaped eyes, and downturned mouths. The figurines' legs are usually separated, often straight, sometimes bent. Toes and fingers, if shown at all, are frequently represented by lines.

It has been theorized that the elongated, flat-topped heads are reflective of the practice of artificial cranial deformation, as found in the Tlatilco burials of the same period or among the Maya of a later era.[14] No direct evidence of this practice has been found in the Olmec heartland, however.

The ears often have small holes for ear flares or other ornaments. These figurines may have therefore once worn earrings and even clothes made of perishable materials. It has been proposed that these figurines had multiple outfits for different ritual occasions – as Richard Diehl puts it, "a pre-Columbian version of Barbie's Ken".[15]

These figurines are usually carved from jade and well under 1 ft (30 cm) in height. For another example, see this Commons photo.

Offering 4 at La Venta edit

At the La Venta archaeological site, archaeologists found what they subsequently named "Offering 4". These figurines had been ritually buried in a deep, narrow hole, and covered over with three layers of colored clay. At some point after the original burial, someone dug a small hole down just to the level of their heads and then refilled it.[16]

Offering 4 consists of sixteen male figurines positioned in a semicircle in front of six jade celts, perhaps representing stelae or basalt columns. Two of the figurines were made from jade, thirteen from serpentine, and one of reddish granite. This granite figurine one was positioned with its back to the celts, facing the others. All of the figurines had similar classic Olmec features including bald elongated heads. They had small holes for earrings, their legs were slightly bent, and they were undecorated – unusual if the figurines were gods or deities – but instead covered with cinnabar.[17]

Interpretations abound. Perhaps this particular formation represents a council of some sort—the fifteen other figurines seem to be listening to the red granite one, with the celts forming a backdrop. One of the most striking offerings found at La Venta, the celts in Offering Number 4, depict a person with a ceremonial headdress “flying” and also the maize deity. There appears to be a definite symbolic link here, but it is unclear whether it is tied to the Olmec rudimentary writing system.[18] To the red granite figurine's right, there seems be a line of three figurines filing past him. Another researcher has suggested that the granite figure is an initiate.

As the name implies, Offering 4 is one of many ritual offerings uncovered at La Venta, including the four Massive Offerings and four mosaics. Why such works would be buried continues to generate much speculation.

 
A small jade were-jaguar figurine. Stand-alone were-jaguar figurines are rare - most were-jaguar figurines show a were-jaguar baby accompanied by a human adult. Height: 8.6 cm (3.4 in).

"Were-jaguar" motif edit

The so-called were-jaguar motif runs through much of Olmec art, from the smallest jade to some of the largest basalt statues. The motif is found inscribed on celts, votive axes, masks, and on "elongated man" figurines.

Also termed, somewhat more neutrally, the "composite anthropomorph"[19] or the "rain baby",[20] the were-jaguar's body, if shown, is baby- or childlike. Its eyes are almond-shaped – or occasionally slit-like.[21] Its nose is human. Its downturned mouth is open, as if in mid-squall. The upper lip is everted and toothless gums are often visible. Olmec motifs associated with the were-jaguar include a cleft on the head or headdress, a headband, and cross-bars.[22]

Most were-jaguar figurines show an inert were-jaguar baby being held by an adult.

 
Olmec eagle transformation figure, 10th–6th century BC Jade (albite), with cinnabar. Height: 4.5 inches (11 cm).

Transformation figures edit

Many other Olmec figurines combined human and animal features. Although figurines showing such combinations of features are generally termed "transformation figures", some researchers argue that they represent humans in animal masks or animal suits, while others state that they likely represent shamans.[23]

This transformation figure[clarification needed] displays bat-like features. Most common, however, is the jaguar transformation figurine (see Commons photo), which show a wide variety of styles, ranging from human-like figurines to those that are almost completely jaguar, and several where the subject appears to be in a stage of transformation.[24]

Naturalistic figurines edit

Despite the many stylised figurines, Olmec-period artisans and artist also portrayed humans naturalistically with "a most extraordinary realistic technique".[25] The lead photo for this article shows a number of tiny naturalistic figurines.

 
A jade fetal-style figurine from Guerrero, Mexico. Height: 3.8 inches (9.7 cm).

Dwarf or fetal-style figurines edit

Another pervasive Olmec figurine type features crouching figurines with thin bodies and over-large oval heads with small noses and receding chins.[26] Some researchers such as Miguel Covarrubias generally characterise these figurines as "dwarfs".[27] many others, also including Covarrubias, see evidence of "what looks like pre-natal posture".[28] In a 1999 article, Carolyn Tate and Gordon Bendersky analysed head-to-body ratios and concluded that these figurines are naturalistic sculptures of fetuses, and discuss the possibility of infanticide and infant sacrifice.[29]

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pool, Christopher A. (Apr 2017). Insoll, Timothy (ed.). "Mesoamerica—Olmec Figurines". The Oxford Handbook of Prehistoric Figurines. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199675616.013.012.
  2. ^ Cheetham, David (2009). "Early Olmec Figurines from Two Regions: Style as Cultural Imperative" (PDF). University Press of Florida.
  3. ^ Castro-Leal, p. 143 .
  4. ^ Scott, p. 268.
  5. ^ Coe (1989), p. 77.
  6. ^ Pohorilenko, p. 121.
  7. ^ Pohorilenko, p. 121 .
  8. ^ Blomster (1998), p. 311, says "Sex or gender do not appear to be indicated on any of these objects.".
  9. ^ Blomster (2002), p. 173.
  10. ^ Blomster (1998).
  11. ^ Blomster (2002).
  12. ^ Coe (1989), p. 77.
  13. ^ Bradley (2005) p. 25.
  14. ^ Diehl, p. 122.
  15. ^ Diehl, p. 122.
  16. ^ Pool, p. 164, who refers to Drucker, Heizer, and Squier (1959) Excavations at La Venta, Tabasco, Smithsonian.
  17. ^ Pool, p. 164.
  18. ^ Xu 1998
  19. ^ Porhilenko.
  20. ^ Miller & Taube. Joralemon (1996) similarly refers to this combination of features as the "storm god".
  21. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  22. ^ Miller & Taube, p. 126.
  23. ^ Diehl, p. 106.
  24. ^ Miller & Taube state that the jaguar is the primary subject of transformation figures, p. 103.
  25. ^ Kubler, p. 12.
  26. ^ Pohorilenko, p. 122.
  27. ^ Covarrubias, p. 64. Pohorilenko, p. 122, also describes these crouching figurines as dwarfs.
  28. ^ Covarrubias, p. 57.
  29. ^ Tate & Bendersky.

References edit

  • Bailey, Douglass (2005). Prehistoric Figurines: Representation and Corporeality in the Neolithic. Routledge Publishers. ISBN 0-415-33152-8.
  • Blomster, Jeffrey (1998). "Context, Cult, and Early Formative Period Public Ritual in the Mixteca Alta, Analysis of a Hollow-baby Figurine from Etlatongo, Oaxaca". Ancient Mesoamerica. 9 (2): 309–326. doi:10.1017/S0956536100002017. S2CID 163048092. (subscription required)
  • Blomster, Jeffrey (2002). "What and Where is Olmec Style? Regional perspectives on Hollow Figurines in Early Formative Mesoamerica". Ancient Mesoamerica. 13 (2): 171–195. doi:10.1017/S0956536102132196. S2CID 161972379. (subscription required)
  • Bradley, Douglas E; Joralemon, Peter David (1993). "The Lords of Life: The Iconography of Power and Fertility in Preclassic Mesoamerica". Snite Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Bradley, Douglas E.; et al. (2005). Celebrating Twenty-five Years in the Snite Museum of Art: 1980-2005. Snite Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame. ISBN 978-0-9753984-1-8.
  • Castro-Leal, Marcia (1996). "The Olmec Collections of the National Museum of Anthropology, Mexico City". In Benson, EP; de la Fuente, B. (eds.). Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico. Washington D.C.: National Gallery of Art. pp. 139–143. ISBN 0-89468-250-4.
  • Coe, Michael D (1989). "The Olmec Heartland: Evolution of Ideology". In Sharer, Robert J.; Grove, David (eds.). Regional Perspectives on the Olmec. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-36332-7.
  • Covarrubias, Miguel (1957). Indian Art of Mexico and Central America. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. OCLC 171974.
  • Kubler, George (1990) [first pub. 1962]. The Art and Architecture of Ancient America (3rd ed.). Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-05325-8. Retrieved 2012-12-14.
  • Miller, Mary; Taube, Karl (1993). The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya: An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion. London: Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05068-6. OCLC 27667317.
  • Pohorilenko, Anatole (1996). "Portable Carvings in the Olmec Style". In Benson, EP; de la Fuente, B. (eds.). Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico. Washington D.C.: National Gallery of Art. ISBN 0-89468-250-4.
  • Pool, Christopher A (2007). Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica. Cambridge World Archaeology. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78882-3. OCLC 68965709.
  • Scott, Sue (2000). "Figurines, Terracotta". In Evans, Susan (ed.). Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America. Taylor & Francis. p. 266. ISBN 9780815308874. Retrieved 2012-12-14.
  • Solis, Felipe (1994). "La Costa del Golfo: el arte del centro de Veracruz y del mundo huasteco". In García, María Luisa Sabau (ed.). México en el mundo de las colecciones de arte: Mesoamerica (in Spanish). Vol. 1. México, D.F.: Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas-UNAM, and Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes. pp. 183–241. ISBN 968-6963-36-7. OCLC 33194574.
  • Tate, Carolyn; Bendersky, Gordon (1999). "Olmec Sculptures of the Human Fetus". Perspectives in Biology and Medicine. 42 (Spring): 1–20. doi:10.1353/pbm.1999.0017. PMID 12966945. S2CID 33648532. Retrieved 2012-12-14.
  • Xu, Mike H. (1998). "La Venta Offering No.4: A Revelation of Olmec Writing?". Pre-Columbiana. 1 (1–2): 131–143.

External links edit

  •  — fine photos of artifacts recovered at the Olmec heartland site of San Andrés.
    This collection details the entire range of figurines & figurine fragments — while other books and articles focus on the more artistic and complete figurines.

olmec, figurine, archetypical, figurines, produced, formative, period, inhabitants, mesoamerica, while, these, figurines, were, produced, olmec, heartland, they, bear, hallmarks, motifs, olmec, culture, while, extent, olmec, control, over, areas, beyond, their. Olmec figurines are archetypical figurines produced by the Formative Period inhabitants of Mesoamerica While not all of these figurines were produced in the Olmec heartland they bear the hallmarks and motifs of Olmec culture While the extent of Olmec control over the areas beyond their heartland is not yet known Formative Period figurines with Olmec motifs were widespread in the centuries from 1000 to 500 BC showing a consistency of style and subject throughout nearly all of Mesoamerica A selection of tiny naturalistic Olmec ceramic figurines from the Metropolitan Museum of Art The hunchback at center is less than 3 inches 7 6 cm tall An archetypical baby face figurine from Las Bocas These figurines are usually found in household refuse ancient construction fill and outside the Olmec heartland graves 1 2 However many Olmec style figurines particularly those labelled as Las Bocas or Xochipala style were recovered by looters and are therefore without provenance The vast majority of figurines are simple in design often nude or with a minimum of clothing and made of local terracotta Most of these recoveries are mere fragments a head arm torso or a leg 3 It is thought based on wooden busts recovered from the water logged El Manati site that figurines were also carved from wood but if so none have survived More durable and better known by the general public are those figurines carved usually with a degree of skill from jade serpentine greenstone basalt and other minerals and stones Contents 1 Baby face figurines 2 Elongated man 2 1 Offering 4 at La Venta 3 Were jaguar motif 4 Transformation figures 5 Naturalistic figurines 6 Dwarf or fetal style figurines 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksBaby face figurines editThe baby face figurine is a unique marker of Olmec culture consistently found in sites that show Olmec influence 4 although they seem to be confined to the early Olmec period and are largely absent for example in La Venta 5 These ceramic figurines are easily recognized by the chubby body the baby like jowly face downturned mouth and the puffy slit like eyes The head is slightly pear shaped likely due to artificial cranial deformation 6 They often wear a tight fitting helmet not dissimilar to those worn by the Olmec colossal heads 7 Baby face figurines are usually naked but without genitalia 8 Their bodies are rarely rendered with the detail shown on their faces Also called hollow babies these figurines are generally from 25 35 cm 9 8 13 8 in high 9 and feature a highly burnished white or cream slip They are only rarely found in archaeological context 10 Archaeologist Jeffrey Blomster divides baby face figurines into two groups based on several features Among the many distinguishing factors Group 1 figurines more closely mirror the characteristics of Gulf Coast Olmec artifacts Group 2 figurines are also slimmer than those of Group 1 lacking the jowly face or fleshy body and their bodies are larger in proportion to their heads 11 Given the sheer numbers of baby face figurines unearthed they undoubtedly fulfilled some special role in the Olmec culture What they represented however is not known Michael Coe says One of the great enigmas in Olmec iconography is the nature and meaning of the large hollow whiteware babies 12 nbsp An elongated man figurine dark green serpentine Inlays since lost once animated the eyes ears nose and mouth 13 Elongated man editAnother common figurine style features standing figurines in a stiff artificial pose and characterized by their thin limbs elongated bald flat topped heads almond shaped eyes and downturned mouths The figurines legs are usually separated often straight sometimes bent Toes and fingers if shown at all are frequently represented by lines It has been theorized that the elongated flat topped heads are reflective of the practice of artificial cranial deformation as found in the Tlatilco burials of the same period or among the Maya of a later era 14 No direct evidence of this practice has been found in the Olmec heartland however The ears often have small holes for ear flares or other ornaments These figurines may have therefore once worn earrings and even clothes made of perishable materials It has been proposed that these figurines had multiple outfits for different ritual occasions as Richard Diehl puts it a pre Columbian version of Barbie s Ken 15 These figurines are usually carved from jade and well under 1 ft 30 cm in height For another example see this Commons photo Offering 4 at La Venta edit At the La Venta archaeological site archaeologists found what they subsequently named Offering 4 These figurines had been ritually buried in a deep narrow hole and covered over with three layers of colored clay At some point after the original burial someone dug a small hole down just to the level of their heads and then refilled it 16 Offering 4 consists of sixteen male figurines positioned in a semicircle in front of six jade celts perhaps representing stelae or basalt columns Two of the figurines were made from jade thirteen from serpentine and one of reddish granite This granite figurine one was positioned with its back to the celts facing the others All of the figurines had similar classic Olmec features including bald elongated heads They had small holes for earrings their legs were slightly bent and they were undecorated unusual if the figurines were gods or deities but instead covered with cinnabar 17 Interpretations abound Perhaps this particular formation represents a council of some sort the fifteen other figurines seem to be listening to the red granite one with the celts forming a backdrop One of the most striking offerings found at La Venta the celts in Offering Number 4 depict a person with a ceremonial headdress flying and also the maize deity There appears to be a definite symbolic link here but it is unclear whether it is tied to the Olmec rudimentary writing system 18 To the red granite figurine s right there seems be a line of three figurines filing past him Another researcher has suggested that the granite figure is an initiate As the name implies Offering 4 is one of many ritual offerings uncovered at La Venta including the four Massive Offerings and four mosaics Why such works would be buried continues to generate much speculation nbsp A small jade were jaguar figurine Stand alone were jaguar figurines are rare most were jaguar figurines show a were jaguar baby accompanied by a human adult Height 8 6 cm 3 4 in Were jaguar motif editThe so called were jaguar motif runs through much of Olmec art from the smallest jade to some of the largest basalt statues The motif is found inscribed on celts votive axes masks and on elongated man figurines Also termed somewhat more neutrally the composite anthropomorph 19 or the rain baby 20 the were jaguar s body if shown is baby or childlike Its eyes are almond shaped or occasionally slit like 21 Its nose is human Its downturned mouth is open as if in mid squall The upper lip is everted and toothless gums are often visible Olmec motifs associated with the were jaguar include a cleft on the head or headdress a headband and cross bars 22 Most were jaguar figurines show an inert were jaguar baby being held by an adult nbsp Olmec eagle transformation figure 10th 6th century BC Jade albite with cinnabar Height 4 5 inches 11 cm Transformation figures editMany other Olmec figurines combined human and animal features Although figurines showing such combinations of features are generally termed transformation figures some researchers argue that they represent humans in animal masks or animal suits while others state that they likely represent shamans 23 This transformation figure clarification needed displays bat like features Most common however is the jaguar transformation figurine see Commons photo which show a wide variety of styles ranging from human like figurines to those that are almost completely jaguar and several where the subject appears to be in a stage of transformation 24 Naturalistic figurines editDespite the many stylised figurines Olmec period artisans and artist also portrayed humans naturalistically with a most extraordinary realistic technique 25 The lead photo for this article shows a number of tiny naturalistic figurines nbsp A jade fetal style figurine from Guerrero Mexico Height 3 8 inches 9 7 cm Dwarf or fetal style figurines editAnother pervasive Olmec figurine type features crouching figurines with thin bodies and over large oval heads with small noses and receding chins 26 Some researchers such as Miguel Covarrubias generally characterise these figurines as dwarfs 27 many others also including Covarrubias see evidence of what looks like pre natal posture 28 In a 1999 article Carolyn Tate and Gordon Bendersky analysed head to body ratios and concluded that these figurines are naturalistic sculptures of fetuses and discuss the possibility of infanticide and infant sacrifice 29 Gallery edit nbsp This rather unlively figurine belongs to Blomster s Group 2 nbsp A baby face figurine from the Museo Nacional del Jade San Jose Costa Rica nbsp A ceramic figurine showing typical baby face characteristics Snite Museum of ArtSee also editOlmec influences on Mesoamerican cultures a discussion of Olmec influence outside the Olmec heartlandNotes edit Pool Christopher A Apr 2017 Insoll Timothy ed Mesoamerica Olmec Figurines The Oxford Handbook of Prehistoric Figurines doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199675616 013 012 Cheetham David 2009 Early Olmec Figurines from Two Regions Style as Cultural Imperative PDF University Press of Florida Castro Leal p 143 Scott p 268 Coe 1989 p 77 Pohorilenko p 121 Pohorilenko p 121 Blomster 1998 p 311 says Sex or gender do not appear to be indicated on any of these objects Blomster 2002 p 173 Blomster 1998 Blomster 2002 Coe 1989 p 77 Bradley 2005 p 25 Diehl p 122 Diehl p 122 Pool p 164 who refers to Drucker Heizer and Squier 1959 Excavations at La Venta Tabasco Smithsonian Pool p 164 Xu 1998 Porhilenko Miller amp Taube Joralemon 1996 similarly refers to this combination of features as the storm god Miller amp Taube p 126 Miller amp Taube p 126 Diehl p 106 Miller amp Taube state that the jaguar is the primary subject of transformation figures p 103 Kubler p 12 Pohorilenko p 122 Covarrubias p 64 Pohorilenko p 122 also describes these crouching figurines as dwarfs Covarrubias p 57 Tate amp Bendersky References editBailey Douglass 2005 Prehistoric Figurines Representation and Corporeality in the Neolithic Routledge Publishers ISBN 0 415 33152 8 Blomster Jeffrey 1998 Context Cult and Early Formative Period Public Ritual in the Mixteca Alta Analysis of a Hollow baby Figurine from Etlatongo Oaxaca Ancient Mesoamerica 9 2 309 326 doi 10 1017 S0956536100002017 S2CID 163048092 subscription required Blomster Jeffrey 2002 What and Where is Olmec Style Regional perspectives on Hollow Figurines in Early Formative Mesoamerica Ancient Mesoamerica 13 2 171 195 doi 10 1017 S0956536102132196 S2CID 161972379 subscription required Bradley Douglas E Joralemon Peter David 1993 The Lords of Life The Iconography of Power and Fertility in Preclassic Mesoamerica Snite Museum of Art University of Notre Dame a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bradley Douglas E et al 2005 Celebrating Twenty five Years in the Snite Museum of Art 1980 2005 Snite Museum of Art University of Notre Dame ISBN 978 0 9753984 1 8 Castro Leal Marcia 1996 The Olmec Collections of the National Museum of Anthropology Mexico City In Benson EP de la Fuente B eds Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico Washington D C National Gallery of Art pp 139 143 ISBN 0 89468 250 4 Coe Michael D 1989 The Olmec Heartland Evolution of Ideology In Sharer Robert J Grove David eds Regional Perspectives on the Olmec Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36332 7 Covarrubias Miguel 1957 Indian Art of Mexico and Central America New York Alfred A Knopf OCLC 171974 Kubler George 1990 first pub 1962 The Art and Architecture of Ancient America 3rd ed Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 05325 8 Retrieved 2012 12 14 Miller Mary Taube Karl 1993 The Gods and Symbols of Ancient Mexico and the Maya An Illustrated Dictionary of Mesoamerican Religion London Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 05068 6 OCLC 27667317 Pohorilenko Anatole 1996 Portable Carvings in the Olmec Style In Benson EP de la Fuente B eds Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico Washington D C National Gallery of Art ISBN 0 89468 250 4 Pool Christopher A 2007 Olmec Archaeology and Early Mesoamerica Cambridge World Archaeology Cambridge and New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78882 3 OCLC 68965709 Scott Sue 2000 Figurines Terracotta In Evans Susan ed Archaeology of Ancient Mexico and Central America Taylor amp Francis p 266 ISBN 9780815308874 Retrieved 2012 12 14 Solis Felipe 1994 La Costa del Golfo el arte del centro de Veracruz y del mundo huasteco In Garcia Maria Luisa Sabau ed Mexico en el mundo de las colecciones de arte Mesoamerica in Spanish Vol 1 Mexico D F Secretaria de Relaciones Exteriores Instituto de Investigaciones Esteticas UNAM and Consejo Nacional para la Cultura y las Artes pp 183 241 ISBN 968 6963 36 7 OCLC 33194574 Tate Carolyn Bendersky Gordon 1999 Olmec Sculptures of the Human Fetus Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 42 Spring 1 20 doi 10 1353 pbm 1999 0017 PMID 12966945 S2CID 33648532 Retrieved 2012 12 14 Xu Mike H 1998 La Venta Offering No 4 A Revelation of Olmec Writing Pre Columbiana 1 1 2 131 143 External links editComprehensive catalogue of Olmec figurines and figurine fragments fine photos of artifacts recovered at the Olmec heartland site of San Andres This collection details the entire range of figurines amp figurine fragments while other books and articles focus on the more artistic and complete figurines nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Olmec figurines Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Olmec figurine amp oldid 1206711746, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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