Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel
Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel
Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel
Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel
Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel
Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel
Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel

Colima Pottery Seated Dog Vessel

17024

Regular price$1,250.00
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West Mexico, Protoclassic Period, ca. 100 B.C. – A.D. 250

A burnished red-brown pottery effigy vessel modeled as a seated dog with a flared cylindrical spout rising from the top of the head. The animal is portrayed in a lively, naturalistic posture with a plump, rounded body, perked triangular ears, expressive puffy eyes, a small applied nose, and an incised crosshatched mouth baring teeth in a characteristic grin. A short, curled tail projects from the rear. The surface retains a well-preserved red-brown slip with overall strong mineral deposits and white root marks consistent with prolonged underground burial. 

Size: 7-1/4 in. H. x 9-1/2 in. L. (18.4 x 24.1 cm)

This engaging vessel is a representation of the Xoloitzcuintli, the hairless dog native to Mesoamerica, which held a multivalent role in ancient Colima society — cherished as a household companion, valued as a source of warmth on cold nights, and raised as a food source. In funerary belief, dogs served as psychopomps, guiding the souls of the deceased on the perilous journey through the underworld to Mictlán. The plump, well-fed body of this example suggests an animal of some standing within the household, and the vessel form — with its functional spout — indicates the piece was intended as a grave offering to accompany and sustain the dead.

Dog effigies are among the most recognizable and sought-after products of the Colima shaft-tomb tradition, and this example displays the vigorous modeling, expressive character, and warm burnished surface that distinguish the finest Colima redware.

Provenance:   Estate of Dr. William K. Emerson (1925–2016), New York City; acquired in the 1960s–1970s. Dr. Emerson served as Curator Emeritus at the American Museum of Natural History for four decades. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley before joining AMNH in 1955, where he rose to Chair of the Department of Living Invertebrates, discovered and classified over 100 species of mollusks on numerous Pacific expeditions, and published six books and more than 100 articles. He retired in 1995. Dr. Emerson was an avid collector of pre-Columbian art throughout the 1960s and 1970s

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.

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