Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust
Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust
Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust
Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust
Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust
Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust
Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust

Tlatilco Pottery Two Face “Pretty Lady” Bust

17316

Regular price$595.00
/
Shipping calculated at checkout.

This site is protected by hCaptcha and the hCaptcha Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Middle Preclassic, ca. 1200 to 500 B.C. Central Highlands, Mexico. 
This two face Tlatilco bust is significant because it condenses several core concerns of Early Formative central Mexican society: fertility, duality, and a fascination with extraordinary bodies that likely carried supernatural or cosmological meaning. Bicephalic and double‑faced Tlatilco figures are rare within a large corpus of single‑headed “pretty ladies,” so the duplication of the head is deliberate and symbolically charged rather than a stylistic accident.

Many scholars read these works as visualizations of duality paired but integrated principles such as life/death, day/night, or earth/underworld which becomes a fundamental theme throughout later Mesoamerican religions. Most Tlatilco figurines are female, emphasizing hips, thighs, and the lower belly; this has long tied them to ideas of fertility, sexuality, and life‑giving power, even when the body carries deformities.
Tlatilco artisans showed a special interest in physical anomalies: hunchbacks, dwarfs, contorted acrobats, and especially two‑headed or fused‑face females; more than other contemporaneous Olmec‑related sites.

As a clearly legible fragent of a two‑headed figure, this stands at the intersection of medical observation, religious symbolism, and elite feminine imagery, making it an especially valuable document of how Tlatilco people conceptualized the borders between the human and the divine. 

This two face example shares a central eye and has remnants of the neck and chest. Missing arms and part of fillet headband and forehead.  Particularly nice almond shaped eyes with added ocher pigment remaining.  
Size 1-7/8 inches Height; 2-5/8 in on custom mount.  
Compare similar example in The Jaguar's Children: Pre-Classic Central Mexico. by  Coe, Michael D.  NY: Museum of Primitive Art, 1965.  

Provenance: Private Mercer Island WA collection by descent from Ruth Goldwyn Capps & Henry McClure Capps (known as Mac) who was an art director and production designer for TV & films in the mid-1950s.


 

 

All pieces are unconditionally guaranteed authentic and as described in perpetuity and have been legally acquired and imported in full accordance with U.S. and applicable foreign regulations regarding the movement and sale of antiquities.

A signed guarantee of authenticity with a description and photograph of the item(s) accompanies this object.

We ship Tuesday to Friday with UPS or USPS and usually same day if your order is received before 2pm. Depending on size and destination, delivery times range from one to five business days.

For overseas shipments our shipping charge includes packing, preparation of all customs paperwork, insurance and carrier fees in compliance with all USA and International customs requirements.

Overseas shipments are usually sent by courier but contact us if you have a shipping preference. International customers are responsible for all duties and taxes. 

You may also like


Recently viewed