{"secondaryobjectnumber":"","periodterms":[],"creditline":"Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund","caption":"Teresa Margolles (born 1963, Culiacán, Mexico; active Mexico City, Mexico), El manto negro (The Black Shroud), 2020. Burnished ceramic; 10.5 × 11.1 × 3.5 cm. Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund (2020-340.1-.1600)","cultureterms":[{"id":2038506,"culture":"Mexican"}],"type":"artobject","dimensionsproposed":"","campus_art":false,"terms":[{"id":2054791,"term":"sculpture","aatid":300047090,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2054895,"term":"installations (sculpture)","aatid":300047896,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2038506,"term":"Mexican","aatid":300107963,"termtype":"Culture"},{"id":2083237,"term":"monuments","aatid":300006958,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2062945,"term":"shrouds","aatid":300215011,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2045125,"term":"tile","aatid":300010676,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2152702,"term":"burnishing (polishing)","aatid":300053869,"termtype":"Techniques"},{"id":2160750,"term":"ceramic","aatid":300235507,"termtype":"Materials"}],"geography":[{"displaygeography":"Place made: North America, Mexico, Chihuahua, Mata Ortiz","code":"Place made","continent":"North America","subcontinent":null,"country":"Mexico","region":null,"state":"Chihuahua","city":"Mata Ortiz","county":null,"subregion":null,"locale":null,"locus":null,"river":null,"excavation":null,"geoname":"https://www.geonames.org/3996407/mata-ortiz.html","location":{"lat":"","lon":""}}],"dimensionelements":[{"element":"Overall","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"10.47"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"11.11"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Depth","units":"centimeters","dimension":"3.49"}],"markings":null,"accessionyear":"2020-01-01","newaccession":0,"makers":[{"id":22011,"displayname":"Teresa Margolles","displaydate":"born 1963, Culiacán, Mexico; active Mexico City, Mexico","datebegin":1963,"dateend":0,"prefix":null,"suffix":null,"role":"Artist","displaymaker":"Teresa Margolles, born 1963, Culiacán, Mexico; active Mexico City, Mexico","displayorder":1}],"datecomputed":2020,"signed":null,"restrictions":"Restricted","classification":"Sculpture","packages":[{"packageid":270705,"name":"Web_CA_2025_LatinAmerican"},{"packageid":216463,"name":"image_descriptions_newacquisitions_2020"},{"packageid":211295,"name":"Gallery_19-CrossCollections"},{"packageid":268066,"name":"Web_CA_2025_ModCon"},{"packageid":278831,"name":"10282025-DAY1-ONVIEW"}],"catalograisonne":null,"classifications":[{"id":2045125,"classification":"tile"},{"id":2054791,"classification":"sculpture"},{"id":2054895,"classification":"installations (sculpture)"}],"exhibitions":[],"cultures":[],"primaryimage":["https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/TC2020-18-1_VEN-1"],"displaytitle":"El manto negro (The Black Shroud)","displayculture":null,"displaymaker":"Teresa Margolles, born 1963, Culiacán, Mexico; active Mexico City, Mexico","alt_numbers":[],"captionhtml":"Teresa Margolles (born 1963, Culiacán, Mexico; active Mexico City, Mexico), <i>El manto negro (The Black Shroud)</i>, 2020. Burnished ceramic; 10.5 × 11.1 × 3.5 cm. Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund (2020-340.1-.1600)","displaydate":"2020","medium":"Burnished ceramic","media":[{"id":235171,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/TC2020-18-1_VEN-1","isprimary":1,"rank":1,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":"Restricted","caption":"Vendor Image"},{"id":235172,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/TC2020-18-1_VEN-3","isprimary":0,"rank":3,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":"Restricted","caption":"Vendor Image"},{"id":235173,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/TC2020-18-1_VEN-2","isprimary":0,"rank":2,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":"Restricted","caption":"Vendor Image"}],"displayperiod":null,"extended_content":true,"campuscollections":"false","bibliography":[],"nowebuse":"False","periods":[],"department":"Modern and Contemporary Art","attribute_groups":[{"id":2199323,"term":"Latin American Art","termtype":"Collecting Area"},{"id":2199324,"term":"Art Since 1945","termtype":"Collecting Area"}],"daterange":"A.D. 1945-present","dateend":2020,"depicted":[],"titles":[{"title":"El manto negro (The Black Shroud)","titletype":"Primary Title","displayorder":1}],"hasimage":"true","creditlinerepro":"© Teresa Margolles / courtesy of the artist and James Cohan, New York\r\n","objectnumber":"2020-340.1-.1600","inscribed":null,"texts":[{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Multivocal Label","textentryhtml":"“Every tile, every fragment, could symbolically represent the body of a murdered person,” Margolles stated about El manto negro’s 1,600 ceramic squares during a talk in 2022 at the Princeton University Art Museum. Margolles created the tiles in collaboration<br />with the renowned ceramicists of Mata Ortiz, a village in Chihuahua, Mexico, to memorialize the people murdered due to drug trade and cartel violence in this region near the US-Mexico border. With her work, Margolles seeks to call attention to the responsibility that Mexico and the United States shared for this violence—the cartels operate in Mexico, while their weapons are produced in the United States. As the artist explains, “The wall becomes a unifying shroud that covers both countries.”","remarks":"CRSS_19_WLA – Day 1 Cataloguing"},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Provenance","textentryhtml":"Teresa Margolles, Mexico City, Mexico, to; [James Cohan Gallery, New York, New York], sold; to Princeton University Art Museum, 2020.","remarks":"as per Mitra's notes in TMS"}],"datebegin":2020,"sortnumber":"2020  340     11600","published_date":"2026-04-22 02:00:36.877367","objectid":137455,"dimensions":"each (approximately): 10.5 × 11.1 × 3.5 cm (4 1/8 × 4 3/8 × 1 3/8 in.)","on_view":true}