Skip to content

Effigy Metate (Grinding Stone)

Creator Name

Costa Rican

Cultural Context

Atlantic Watershed

Date

Creation: AD 700-1550 (Late Period V–Period VI)

About the Work

Walters Art Museum Object Description
In 1502, the Spanish observed monolithic carved "boards" being used as funeral biers, their animal imagery identified as clan symbols. Other early accounts mention the use of similar but smaller "tables" to grind tobacco and other hallucinogenic materials used during shamanic religious rituals. Spanish missionaries destroyed many of these stone artworks because of their association with "pagan" rites. Equally unfortunate is the lack of descriptions by the early chroniclers of indigenous religious beliefs and myths as well as the dramatic population decline due to European diseases to which the native peoples had no natural immunity. As a result, little has survived to illuminate the religious and social beliefs of the societies of ancient Costa Rica. The paucity of data severely ...

Work details

"--" = no data available
Curationist Logo= Curationist added metadata

Title

Effigy Metate (Grinding Stone)

Creator

Costa Rican

Worktype

Sculpture; metates; mortars (grinding tools)

Cultural Context

Atlantic Watershed

Material

volcanic stone

Dimensions

H: 3 7/8 x L: 8 9/16 x W: 6 1/4 in. (9.8 x 21.8 x 15.9 cm)

Technique

--

Language

--

Date

Creation: AD 700-1550 (Late Period V–Period VI)

Provenance

given to Walters Art Museum, 2013.; Stendahl Galleries, Los Angeles; purchased by John G. Bourne, Santa Fe, New Mexico, 1945; given to Walters Art Museum, 2013.

Style Period

--

Rights

Curationist Logo
CC0;
GNU Free Documentation License

Inscription

--

Location

--

Subjects

--

Topic

--

Related Content

--

All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Costa Rican, Effigy Metate (Grinding Stone), AD 700-1550 (Late Period V–Period VI), Walters Art Museum. CC0, GNU Free Documentation License.

Help us improve this content!

Let our archivists know if you have something to add.

Save this work.

Start an account to add this work to your personal curated collection.
masonry card