Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán

Maya artists working in the northern Yucatán Peninsula c. 700-800 CE began creating a new ceramic style. Deeply carved and exhibiting complex iconography and hieroglyphic inscriptions, Chocholá ceramics have long been recognized as among the most beautiful items produced by ancient Maya craftsmen...

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Main Author: Werness, Maline Diane
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-1339
http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21489
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-214892015-09-20T17:16:01ZChocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern YucatánWerness, Maline DianeMayaCeramicsChocholáOxkintokMaya artists working in the northern Yucatán Peninsula c. 700-800 CE began creating a new ceramic style. Deeply carved and exhibiting complex iconography and hieroglyphic inscriptions, Chocholá ceramics have long been recognized as among the most beautiful items produced by ancient Maya craftsmen. Indeed, the Chocholá style can be associated with a number of firsts in Maya studies: the first published explorations, the first major art historical investigations of ceramics, the first attempts at ceramic seriation and the first translations of the dedicatory formula all include images of Chocholá pots. Many examples lack provenience, however, due to extensive looting and the corpus has been relegated to a shadowy corner of the Maya world as a result. With the aid of new archaeological information and advances in iconographic and epigraphic studies, I develop an interdisciplinary rubric for classifying Chocholá pieces. Additionally, I analyze vessel imagery and texts, thus deciphering ostensible meanings as well as identifying the kinds of messages elites were trying to project through ownership and exchange. As with other high-status commodities, these ceramics functioned as prestige items and facilitated regional alliances through gifting and feasting. An analysis of temporal setting illuminates the aesthetic innovation and traditionalism Chocholá patrons manipulated in order to legitimize their own standing in such contexts. My work results in a more refined picture of extended northern socio-political interaction and interconnection. I show that one extremely powerful site—Oxkintok, in the hilly Puuc region of Yucatán—produced such vessels and disseminated them south, west and northeast. In dialogue with Oxkintok's expanding sphere of political influence, stylistic variations also developed in these outlying regions. Ultimately, I use the confluence of data to reconstruct a more concrete system of intra-regional connection and interchange.text2013-10-08T16:48:24Z2010-052012-11-30May 20102013-10-08T16:48:24Zapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-1339http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21489en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Maya
Ceramics
Chocholá
Oxkintok
spellingShingle Maya
Ceramics
Chocholá
Oxkintok
Werness, Maline Diane
Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán
description Maya artists working in the northern Yucatán Peninsula c. 700-800 CE began creating a new ceramic style. Deeply carved and exhibiting complex iconography and hieroglyphic inscriptions, Chocholá ceramics have long been recognized as among the most beautiful items produced by ancient Maya craftsmen. Indeed, the Chocholá style can be associated with a number of firsts in Maya studies: the first published explorations, the first major art historical investigations of ceramics, the first attempts at ceramic seriation and the first translations of the dedicatory formula all include images of Chocholá pots. Many examples lack provenience, however, due to extensive looting and the corpus has been relegated to a shadowy corner of the Maya world as a result. With the aid of new archaeological information and advances in iconographic and epigraphic studies, I develop an interdisciplinary rubric for classifying Chocholá pieces. Additionally, I analyze vessel imagery and texts, thus deciphering ostensible meanings as well as identifying the kinds of messages elites were trying to project through ownership and exchange. As with other high-status commodities, these ceramics functioned as prestige items and facilitated regional alliances through gifting and feasting. An analysis of temporal setting illuminates the aesthetic innovation and traditionalism Chocholá patrons manipulated in order to legitimize their own standing in such contexts. My work results in a more refined picture of extended northern socio-political interaction and interconnection. I show that one extremely powerful site—Oxkintok, in the hilly Puuc region of Yucatán—produced such vessels and disseminated them south, west and northeast. In dialogue with Oxkintok's expanding sphere of political influence, stylistic variations also developed in these outlying regions. Ultimately, I use the confluence of data to reconstruct a more concrete system of intra-regional connection and interchange. === text
author Werness, Maline Diane
author_facet Werness, Maline Diane
author_sort Werness, Maline Diane
title Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán
title_short Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán
title_full Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán
title_fullStr Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán
title_full_unstemmed Chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern Yucatán
title_sort chocholá ceramics and the polities of northwestern yucatán
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-1339
http://hdl.handle.net/2152/21489
work_keys_str_mv AT wernessmalinediane chocholaceramicsandthepolitiesofnorthwesternyucatan
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