{"secondaryobjectnumber":null,"periodterms":[],"creditline":"Museum purchase, gift of the Friends of The Art Museum in honor of the sixtieth birthday of Gillett G. Griffin","caption":"Classic Veracruz, Late Classic Period, 600–900, Veracruz, Gulf Coast, Mexico, Mesoamerica, Hip-stone. Granite with traces of red pigment; 12 × 37 × 40.5 cm. Museum purchase, gift of the Friends of The Art Museum in honor of the sixtieth birthday of Gillett G. Griffin (y1988-12)","cultureterms":[{"id":2039077,"culture":"Late Classic"},{"id":2039152,"culture":"Classic Veracruz"}],"type":"artobject","dimensionsproposed":"","terms":[{"id":2048754,"term":"ceremonial objects","aatid":300234117,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2055331,"term":"relief","aatid":300047230,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2084114,"term":"ball courts","aatid":300007324,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2039077,"term":"Late Classic","aatid":300016986,"termtype":"Culture"},{"id":2039152,"term":"Classic Veracruz","aatid":300017056,"termtype":"Culture"},{"id":2158090,"term":"faces","aatid":null,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2094122,"term":"athletes","aatid":300236025,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2146924,"term":"ball games","aatid":300239662,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2168423,"term":"pigment","aatid":300013109,"termtype":"Materials"},{"id":2163224,"term":"granite","aatid":300011183,"termtype":"Materials"}],"geography":[{"displaygeography":"Place made: North America, Mexico, Veracruz, Gulf Coast","code":"Place made","continent":"North America","subcontinent":"Mesoamerica","country":"Mexico","region":"Gulf Coast","state":"Veracruz","city":null,"county":null,"subregion":null,"locale":null,"locus":null,"river":null,"excavation":null,"geoname":"http://www.geonames.org/3514780/estado-de-veracruz-llave.html","location":{"lat":"","lon":""}}],"dimensionelements":[{"element":"Overall","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"12.00"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"37.00"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Depth","units":"centimeters","dimension":"40.50"}],"markings":null,"accessionyear":"1988-01-01","newaccession":0,"makers":[],"datecomputed":750,"signed":null,"restrictions":null,"classification":"Ceremonial Objects","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":141943,"name":"Web_Ballgame_Paraphenalia"},{"packageid":141941,"name":"Web_Ballgame_all"}],"catalograisonne":null,"classifications":[{"id":2055331,"classification":"relief"},{"id":2048754,"classification":"ceremonial objects"}],"exhibitions":[{"exhibitionid":337,"citation":"The Sport of Life and Death: The Mesoamerican Ballgame:\r\nMint Museum of Art (22 Sept., 2001 – 6 Jan., 2002);\r\nNew Orleans Museum of Art (16 Feb. – 28 Apr. 2002);\r\nJoslyn Art Museum (8 Jun. – 1 Sept., 2002);\r\nNewark Museum (1 Oct. – 1 Dec., 2002).","isvirtual":true,"begindate":"2001-09-24","enddate":"2002-12-01","uri":"https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/art/exhibitions/337"},{"exhibitionid":3,"citation":"Unexpected Journey: Gillett G. Griffin and the Art of the Ancient Americas at Princeton (May 7–June 26, 2005)","isvirtual":true,"begindate":"2005-05-07","enddate":"2005-06-26","uri":"https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/art/exhibitions/3"}],"cultures":[{"id":13849,"culture":"Classic Veracruz","alphasort":"Classic Veracruz","begindate":0,"enddate":0,"displayculture":"Classic Veracruz","displaydate":null}],"primaryimage":["https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/y1988-12_1"],"displaytitle":"Hip-stone","displayculture":"Classic Veracruz","displaymaker":null,"captionhtml":"Classic Veracruz, Late Classic Period, 600–900, Veracruz, Gulf Coast, Mexico, Mesoamerica, <i>Hip-stone</i>. Granite with traces of red pigment; 12 × 37 × 40.5 cm. Museum purchase, gift of the Friends of The Art Museum in honor of the sixtieth birthday of Gillett G. Griffin (y1988-12)","displaydate":"600–900","medium":"Granite with traces of red pigment","media":[{"id":74626,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/y1988-12_1","isprimary":1,"rank":3,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"Bruce White Photography"}],"displayperiod":"Late Classic Period","extended_content":true,"campuscollections":"false","bibliography":[{"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. 133","date":2013,"id":1994,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/865020505"},{"boilertext":"Mary E. Miller, \"The Ballgame,\" <i>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</i> 48, no. 2 (1989): 22–31.","citation":"Mary E. Miller, \"The Ballgame,\" <i>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</i> 48, no. 2 (1989): 22–31., fig. 11 a–c, p. 28","date":1989,"id":2789,"uri":"https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774731"},{"boilertext":"Mary E. Miller, \"Rethinking the Classic Sculptures of Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz,\" in <i>Settlement Archaeology of Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz, Mexico</i>, ed. Barbara L. Stark (Los Angeles: Institute of Archaeology, University of California, 1990).","citation":"Mary E. Miller, \"Rethinking the Classic Sculptures of Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz,\" in <i>Settlement Archaeology of Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz, Mexico</i>, ed. Barbara L. Stark (Los Angeles: Institute of Archaeology, University of California, 1990)., fig. 2.15., p. 35 (illus.), p. 33f","date":1990,"id":2794,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/23462299"},{"boilertext":"<i>Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collection</i> (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007)","citation":"<i>Princeton University Art Museum: Handbook of the Collection</i> (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2007), p. 130 (illus.)","date":2007,"id":474,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/191864564"},{"boilertext":"E. Michael Whittington, ed., <em>The sport of life and death: the Mesoamerican ballgame</em> (New York: Thames &amp; Hudson, 2001).","citation":"E. Michael Whittington, ed., <em>The sport of life and death: the Mesoamerican ballgame</em> (New York: Thames &amp; Hudson, 2001)., cat. no. 87","date":2001,"id":2942,"uri":"https://search.worldcat.org/title/49029226"},{"boilertext":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1988,\" <EM>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University </EM>48, no. 1 (1989): p. 35-59.","citation":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1988,\" <EM>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University </EM>48, no. 1 (1989): p. 35-59., p. 58 (illus.)","date":1989,"id":3105,"uri":"https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774727"}],"nowebuse":"False","periods":[{"id":24016,"period":"Late Classic Period","alphasort":"Classic Period, Late","begindate":0,"enddate":0,"displayperiod":"Late Classic Period","displaydate":null}],"department":"Art of the Ancient Americas","attribute_groups":[{"id":2199317,"term":"Art of the Ancient Americas","termtype":"Collecting Area"}],"daterange":"A.D. 500-1000","dateend":900,"depicted":[],"titles":[{"title":"Hip-stone","titletype":"Primary Title","displayorder":1}],"hasimage":"true","creditlinerepro":"","objectnumber":"y1988-12","inscribed":null,"texts":[{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Provenance","textentryhtml":"February 10, 1988, sold by The Merrin Gallery, New York, to the Princeton University Art Museum.\n","remarks":null},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Gallery Label","textentryhtml":"This hip-stone portrays in relief a human figure at the center of the U-shape, represented primarily by a frontal face at the center. Hands can be discerned on either side of this face, presumably representing the arms of the same individual. The faces along the side of the object have features that are identical to the central face, but they might be most accurately conceptualized as adornments worn by the individual depicted on the front, as if attached to his waist. They may represent actual heads of decapitated individuals or perhaps stone versions of decapitations, such as the hachas displayed in this case. The distortion of each face, with one eye swollen, mouth shifted awkwardly to one side, and tongue lolling, is described by the Spanish word tuerto (one-eyed). Interlocking scrollwork, characteristic of a Veracruz style, embellishes the interstices of the figural relief. Fanged serpent heads adorn the hip-stone’s ends.\n","remarks":"AAA3_20-T3B-9_CLA_FA_7_17_25.pdf - Day 1 installation"},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Gallery Label","textentryhtml":"<p>\n\tAlthough the ballgame was played throughout Mexico and Central America, no region gave it more attention than Veracruz—in part because the rubber-tree sap used to make the balls is prevalent in the humid tropical lowlands along the Mexican coast. Most regional variants of the game shared several basic features: a solid rubber ball; a ball court consisting of a narrow alleyway with sloped walls, occasionally with enclosed end zones; and two teams, each with two or three members who wore specialized protective gear. Only the upper arms, thighs, and torso of a player could strike the ball, and each of these areas bore its own type of protection made of stone, cloth, deer hide, or wood. This case presents examples of the basic forms of protective gear made in stone, as well as objects used in gladiatorial combat that occurred in the same ball courts.\n</p>\n<p>\n\tScholars have long thought that the heavy, sculptural stone ballgame gear from Mesoamerica served as trophies for the victors in the game and not as functional equipment. Frequently made of precious greenstone, this ballgame gear also may have been created for wager, as gambling was a signiﬁcant component of Mesoamerican ballgames. Recently, however, specialists determined that a Maya example of a stone “yoke” with inset carved shell hieroglyphs included the inscription ya’tuun, or “hip-stone,” implying that stone protective gear was worn on the hips. By extension, it is plausible that all ballgame-related stone sculptures were used in the game, or at least in ceremonial performances mimicking actual ball play. Some ballgame sculptures include elaborate relief carving, often portraying bruised and battered individuals who may represent captives forced to play as part of sacrificial rites. Others portray paired, youthful faces, possibly mythical hero twins who played the ballgame against lords of the underworld.\n</p>\n<p>\n\tBecause the vast majority of ballgame-related stone objects were looted, it has proven particularly challenging to date them or to corroborate proposals of stylistic changes. By some accounts, smaller, broader hachas, usually with a pronounced protrusion at the top, including the two displayed here, predate the larger, thinner examples. It is also possible, however, that differences in materials used, size, proportions, and details of fabrication show regional variations. The human head, often with details suggesting decapitation, is the most common subject represented. Each of these examples also exhibits traces of paint; while the greenstone used for some sculptures was prized and likely not concealed by paint, hachas made of less valuable materials, such as the elongated white limestone head displayed here, may have warranted color enhancement.\n</p>","remarks":"AAA3_20-T3B-9_CLA_FA_7_17_25.pdf - Day 1 installation"}],"datebegin":600,"sortnumber":"1988   12y","published_date":"2026-02-11 10:33:47.105494","objectid":33195,"dimensions":"12 × 37 × 40.5 cm (4 3/4 × 14 9/16 × 15 15/16 in.)","on_view":true}