{"secondaryobjectnumber":null,"periodterms":[{"id":2035648,"period":"Early Preclassic"}],"creditline":"Gift of Gillett G. Griffin","caption":"Tlatilco (Type D1), Early Formative Period, 1400–1100 BCE, Mexico City, Central Mexico, Mexico, Mesoamerica, Female figurine nursing an infant. Ceramic with red, white, and yellow slip-paint; 9 × 3.8 × 2.8 cm. Gift of Gillett G. Griffin (1999-243)","cultureterms":[{"id":2035688,"culture":"Tlatilco"}],"type":"artobject","dimensionsproposed":"","terms":[{"id":2055657,"term":"figures (representations)","aatid":300189808,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2055437,"term":"figurines","aatid":300047455,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2088280,"term":"women","aatid":300025943,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2049167,"term":"ceramics","aatid":300151343,"termtype":"Classification"},{"id":2088162,"term":"infants","aatid":300189561,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2088218,"term":"mothers","aatid":300025932,"termtype":"Subject"},{"id":2035648,"term":"Early Preclassic","aatid":300016970,"termtype":"Period / Style"},{"id":2035688,"term":"Tlatilco","aatid":300017007,"termtype":"Culture"},{"id":2168423,"term":"pigment","aatid":300013109,"termtype":"Materials"},{"id":2160750,"term":"ceramic","aatid":300235507,"termtype":"Materials"}],"geography":[{"displaygeography":"Place made: North America, Mexico, Mexico City, Central Mexico, Tlatilco","code":"Place made","continent":"North America","subcontinent":"Mesoamerica","country":"Mexico","region":"Central Mexico","state":null,"city":"Mexico City","county":null,"subregion":null,"locale":"Tlatilco","locus":null,"river":null,"excavation":null,"geoname":"http://www.geonames.org/3515368/tlatilco.html","location":{"lat":"","lon":""}}],"dimensionelements":[{"element":"Overall","type":"Height","units":"centimeters","dimension":"9.00"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Width","units":"centimeters","dimension":"3.78"},{"element":"Overall","type":"Depth","units":"centimeters","dimension":"2.75"}],"markings":null,"accessionyear":"1999-01-01","newaccession":0,"makers":[],"datecomputed":-1250,"signed":null,"restrictions":null,"classification":"Ceramic","packages":[{"packageid":225488,"name":"Gallery_20(Pavilion5)-AAA"},{"packageid":278831,"name":"10282025-DAY1-ONVIEW"},{"packageid":207234,"name":"SAB_Gala2021"}],"catalograisonne":null,"classifications":[{"id":2055437,"classification":"figurines"},{"id":2049167,"classification":"ceramics"}],"exhibitions":[],"cultures":[{"id":13858,"culture":"Tlatilco","alphasort":"Tlatilco","begindate":0,"enddate":0,"displayculture":"Tlatilco (Type D1)","displaydate":null}],"primaryimage":["https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/INV018116"],"displaytitle":"Female figurine nursing an infant","displayculture":"Tlatilco (Type D1)","displaymaker":null,"captionhtml":"Tlatilco (Type D1), Early Formative Period, 1400–1100 BCE, Mexico City, Central Mexico, Mexico, Mesoamerica, <i>Female figurine nursing an infant</i>. Ceramic with red, white, and yellow slip-paint; 9 × 3.8 × 2.8 cm. Gift of Gillett G. Griffin (1999-243)","displaydate":"1400–1100 BCE","medium":"Ceramic with red, white, and yellow slip-paint","media":[{"id":192554,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/STU01422","isprimary":0,"rank":2,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"PUAM photo"},{"id":192555,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/STU01423","isprimary":0,"rank":3,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"PUAM photo"},{"id":51411,"uri":"https://media.artmuseum.princeton.edu/iiif/3/collection/INV018116","isprimary":1,"rank":4,"mediatypeid":1,"mediaviewtype":"(not assigned)","restrictions":null,"caption":"Inventory Project"}],"displayperiod":"Early Formative Period","extended_content":false,"campuscollections":"false","bibliography":[{"boilertext":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1999,\" <em>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</em> 59, no. 1/2 (2000): p. 70-101.","citation":"\"Acquisitions of the Art Museum 1999,\" <em>Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University</em> 59, no. 1/2 (2000): p. 70-101., p. 96","date":2000,"id":3036,"uri":"https://www.jstor.org/stable/3774806"}],"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":-1100,"depicted":[],"titles":[{"title":"Female figurine nursing an infant","titletype":"Primary Title","displayorder":1}],"hasimage":"true","creditlinerepro":null,"objectnumber":"1999-243","inscribed":null,"texts":[{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Provenance","textentryhtml":"<p>\n\tBy April, 1967, Gillett G. Griffin (1928-2016), Princeton, NJ [1]; 1999, gift of Gillett G. Griffin to the Princeton University Art Museum.\n</p>\n<p>\n\tNotes:\n\t<br />\n\t[1] According to a dated slide (GG90003093) in the Griffin archive.\n</p>","remarks":null},{"texttype":"Online","textpurpose":"Gallery Label","textentryhtml":"Although not the first places where ceramics were produced in Mesoamerica, villages in the central basin of Mexico, now encompassed by Mexico City, the adjacent valley of Morelos to the south, and the region around the modern town of Las Bocas, Puebla, are among the areas most renowned for their ancient ceramic vessels and figurines. Local workers and amateur pothunters were the first, in the early twentieth century, to encounter the remains of these villages. The objects they looted from the sites and sold on the art market became prized by a small number of art collectors in Mexico and the United States. Later, archaeologists excavated sites in the area, contributing crucial information about the original burial context for these works.\n","remarks":"AAA1_20-T6-3_CLA_FA_9_17_25.pdf - Day 1 installation"}],"datebegin":-1400,"sortnumber":"1999  243","published_date":"2026-02-11 10:58:36.548239","objectid":39062,"dimensions":"9 × 3.8 × 2.8 cm (3 9/16 × 1 1/2 × 1 1/16 in.)","on_view":true}