{"secondaryobjectnumber":null,"periodterms":[{"id":2035648,"period":"Early Preclassic"}],"creditline":"Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Glimcher","caption":"Olmec style, Early Formative Period, 1500–1000 BCE, Veracruz, Gulf Coast, Mexico, Mesoamerica, Seated figurine. Ceramic with cream slip and red slip-paint; 34 × 34 × 23.2 cm. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Glimcher (y1980-35)","cultureterms":[{"id":2035751,"culture":"Olmec"}],"type":"artobject","dimensionsproposed":"","terms":[{"id":2055437,"term":"figurines","aatid":300047455,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2055657,"term":"figures (representations)","aatid":300189808,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2049167,"term":"ceramics","aatid":300151343,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2088162,"term":"infants","aatid":300189561,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2035648,"term":"Early Preclassic","aatid":300016970,"termtype":"Period / Style"},{"id":2035751,"term":"Olmec","aatid":300017051,"termtype":"Culture"},{"id":2151023,"term":"sitting","aatid":null,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2160397,"term":"slip","aatid":300010459,"termtype":"Materials"},{"id":2160750,"term":"ceramic","aatid":300235507,"termtype":"Materials"}],"geography":[{"displaygeography":"Place made: North America, Mexico, Veracruz, Gulf Coast, Tenenexpan","code":"Place made","continent":"North America","subcontinent":"Mesoamerica","country":"Mexico","region":"Gulf Coast","state":"Veracruz","city":null,"county":null,"subregion":null,"locale":"Tenenexpan","locus":null,"river":null,"excavation":null,"geoname":"http://www.geonames.org/3515976/tenenexpan.html","location":{"lat":"","lon":""}}],"dimensionelements":[{"element":"Overall","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"34.00"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"34.00"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Depth","units":"centimeters","dimension":"23.20"}],"markings":null,"accessionyear":"1980-01-01","newaccession":0,"makers":[],"datecomputed":-1250,"signed":null,"restrictions":null,"classification":"Ceramic","packages":[{"packageid":225488,"name":"Gallery_20(Pavilion5)-AAA"},{"packageid":181974,"name":"web_2020_AAA"},{"packageid":278831,"name":"10282025-DAY1-ONVIEW"},{"packageid":197269,"name":"web_highlights -revised 2021"},{"packageid":207234,"name":"SAB_Gala2021"},{"packageid":223468,"name":"2023_ART365/LAS370/ANT365_02_28"}],"catalograisonne":null,"classifications":[{"id":2055437,"classification":"figurines"},{"id":2049167,"classification":"ceramics"}],"exhibitions":[],"cultures":[{"id":12498,"culture":"Olmec","alphasort":"Olmec","begindate":0,"enddate":0,"displayculture":"Olmec style","displaydate":null}],"primaryimage":["https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/y1980-35"],"displaytitle":"Seated figurine","displayculture":"Olmec style","displaymaker":null,"captionhtml":"Olmec style, Early Formative Period, 1500–1000 BCE, Veracruz, Gulf Coast, Mexico, Mesoamerica, <i>Seated figurine</i>. Ceramic with cream slip and red slip-paint; 34 × 34 × 23.2 cm. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Glimcher (y1980-35)","displaydate":"1500–1000 BCE","medium":"Ceramic with cream slip and red slip-paint","media":[{"id":18992,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/y1980-35","isprimary":0,"rank":10,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"PUAM photo"},{"id":74619,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/y1980-35","isprimary":1,"rank":3,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"Bruce White Photography"},{"id":74620,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/y1980-35_OBL","isprimary":0,"rank":2,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"Bruce White Photography"}],"displayperiod":"Early Formative Period","extended_content":false,"campuscollections":"false","bibliography":[{"boilertext":"Jeffrey Blomster, \"What and Where is the Olmec Style? Regional Perspectives on Hollow Figurines in Early Formative Mesoamerica,\"<I> Ancient Mesoamerica</I> 13, no. 2 (2002): p.&nbsp;171-195.","citation":"Jeffrey Blomster, \"What and Where is the Olmec Style? Regional Perspectives on Hollow Figurines in Early Formative Mesoamerica,\"<I> Ancient Mesoamerica</I> 13, no. 2 (2002): p.&nbsp;171-195., fig. 4, pp. 171–195 (illus.)","date":2002,"id":2540,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/365603032"},{"boilertext":"<i>Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collections </i>(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013)","citation":"<i>Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collections </i>(Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Art Museum, 2013), p. 114","date":2013,"id":1994,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/865020505"},{"boilertext":"Harmer Johnson, ed. <i>Guide to the Arts of the Americas</i> (New York: Rizzoli, 1992)","citation":"Harmer Johnson, ed. <i>Guide to the Arts of the Americas</i> (New York: Rizzoli, 1992), p. 56 (illus.)","date":1992,"id":1260,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/25547967"},{"boilertext":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1980\", <em>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</em> 40, no. 1 (1981): p. 14-31.","citation":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1980\", <em>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</em> 40, no. 1 (1981): p. 14-31., p. 30","date":1981,"id":3490,"uri":"https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774603"}],"nowebuse":"False","periods":[{"id":24008,"period":"Early Formative Period","alphasort":"Formative Period, Early","begindate":0,"enddate":0,"displayperiod":"Early Formative Period","displaydate":null}],"department":"Art of the Ancient Americas","attribute_groups":[{"id":2199317,"term":"Art of the Ancient Americas","termtype":"Collecting Area"}],"daterange":"2000-1000 B.C.","dateend":-1000,"depicted":[],"titles":[{"title":"Seated figurine","titletype":"Primary Title","displayorder":1}],"hasimage":"true","creditlinerepro":"","objectnumber":"y1980-35","inscribed":null,"texts":[{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Gallery Label","textentryhtml":"<P><STRONG>Olmec Style Ceramics</STRONG></P>\r\n<P>Beginning about 1200 B.C., stylistically similar ceramic vessels and figurines appear across much of Mesoamerica. Both white-slipped, fleshy figures—some incorporating features of infants—and vessels carved with abstracted renditions of crocodilian beasts (among other motifs) indicate widespread awareness of the complex civilization developing on Mexico’s Gulf Coast at San Lorenzo, the primary Olmec center from 1200 to 900 B.C. and the point of origin of these forms. Confusingly, the term “Olmec” has been applied both to the coastal culture and to the artistic style that appears in so many other parts of Mesoamerica. The exact nature of San Lorenzo’s role in the dissemination of this style remains hotly debated.</P>","remarks":"February 2015 AAA Reinstallation WC5 Formative Mesoamerica. Group chat for three objects: y1980-35, y1987-45, and L.2000.94\r\nAugust 2015 AAA Reninstallation WC5. Group chat for five objects: y1980-35, y1987-45, L.1974.31, L.1989.71, L.1969.16"},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Provenance","textentryhtml":"1980, gift of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Glimcher (Arnold, 1938-) to the Princeton University Art Museum.\n","remarks":null},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Gallery Label","textentryhtml":"<p>Beginning about 1500 BCE, stylistically similar ceramic vessels and figurines appeared across much of Mesoamerica. Both white-slipped, fleshy figures—some incorporating features of infants—and vessels carved with abstracted renditions of crocodilian beasts and other motifs indicate widespread awareness of and interaction with the point of origin of these forms, the complex society at San Lorenzo, Veracruz, the primary Olmec center from 1500 to 1000 BCE. Confusingly, the term Olmec has been applied both to that specific coastal culture and to the artistic style that appears in so many other parts of Mesoamerica. Scientific analyses of Olmec-style ceramic works from various locations across the region demonstrate that some were made at San Lorenzo and exported, while others were local emulations of objects from San Lorenzo.\n</p><p>Hollow “baby” figurines such as this seated example are unique to Mesoamerica’s Early Formative period and are thought to provide evidence of interactions with the Gulf Coast Olmec, who presumably originated the form. The finest figurines are made from ivory-colored kaolin clay and show the curious combination of a plump, baby-like body with a distinctly mature, contemplative facial expression. The subject sits in an infantile posture, legs splayed and hands on knees, wearing a helmet of a type associated with players of the ancient Mesoamerican ballgame. A few dozen other examples of contemporaneous hollow figurines depicting helmeted infant-adults survive, but what they signify is unclear. They may signal a belief that ancestral souls returned to the living world as progeny. If so, this figure may represent a specific ancestor awaiting rebirth or a shared pool of ancestral souls awaiting return to the terrestrial realm.\n </p>","remarks":"AAA1_20-T6-3_CLA_FA_9_17_25.pdf - Day 1 installation"}],"datebegin":-1500,"sortnumber":"1980   35y","published_date":"2026-02-11 10:29:06.055609","objectid":32345,"dimensions":"34 × 34 × 23.2 cm (13 3/8 × 13 3/8 × 9 1/8 in.)","on_view":true}