While Mesoamerican cultures shared some features, they were also incredibly diverse.
By Dr. Caitlin Earley
Assistant Professor of Art History
University of Washington
Introduction
This article considers a time period when powerful centers flourished in the diverse landscapes of Central Mexico, the Gulf Coast, and the Maya area, and when artists throughout the region created monumental works of architecture and art that connected the everyday world with the sacred.
Between 200 and 900 C.E., a span of time known as the Classic period, a variety of cultures flourished in the diverse landscapes of Mesoamerica, a region that stretches from Central Mexico to northern Costa Rica. In this area, ancient cultures shared features like maize cultivation, the calendar, and ballgames. At centers throughout Mesoamerica, artists created monumental works of art and architecture, often commissioned by powerful rulers, that expressed ideas about the world around them and connected the everyday world with the sacred.
While Mesoamerican cultures shared some features, they were also incredibly diverse. In Central Mexico, the metropolis of Teotihuacan was an enormous city with larger-than-life architecture and widespread political power. On the Gulf Coast of Veracruz, artists created works related to the ballgame and ritual power, while in the Maya area, hieroglyphic writing helps to flesh out the political and religious content produced by artists in a region dominated by competing city states.
The works of art and architecture featured in this article are predominantly stone and ceramic, but these represent just a fraction of the art that existed in this period. Sources attest to the creation of works of art in many media, from painted books to cotton textiles to jade jewelry.
This article addresses four themes in Mesoamerican art history:
- monumental architecture
- powerful rulers and dynamic politics
- connecting with the sacred
- and discerning everyday life.
As you explore this material, pay particular attention to both the similarities and differences between works. While many Mesoamerican cultures constructed step pyramids, for instance, imagery played different roles in these buildings from different cultures. And despite variation in style and content, Mesoamerican imagery addresses consistent questions:
- How did ancient architects construct buildings that expressed ideas about identity and the structure of the world?
- In what ways did rulers convey their power through art?
- How was art able to connect the human world with the sacred one, and what can art tell us about everyday life?
The following introductory essays explore what we mean by “Mesoamerica” and the labels scholars use for time periods in this region. They also consider some of the characteristics that cultures in Mesoamerica shared, including a calendar, and introduce two important groups: Teotihuacan and the Maya.
Monumental Architecture
Mesoamerican cultures from 200–900 C.E. constructed enormous monumental centers that served political, religious, and economic purposes. Architectural traditions in this time period grow out of earlier constructions in Mesoamerica, as explored in the article on early Mesoamerica. Buildings served many purposes in Mesoamerica—but whether constructed as royal tombs, temples to the gods, or for other uses, the architecture of Mesoamerica expressed fundamental ideas about powerful people and the structure of the universe. The buildings explored in this section would have been enlivened with colorful paint, smoke billowing from ceremonial incense burners, and the human actions happening in and around them.
Monumental architecture helps us understand what was important to ancient builders and audiences—but there are also significant gaps in our knowledge. The enormous city of Teotihuacan, for instance, was home to some of the largest buildings in the Americas, but archaeologists have not recovered royal graves or palaces, and the governmental structure of the city and surrounding communities remains unclear. At Palenque, in contrast, rulers and their families were interred inside buildings in the city center. Panels inside those structures presented information about politics and religion, allowing contemporary viewers to reconstruct detailed histories of the city.
On the coast of the Gulf of Mexico, artists adorned many structures at El Tajín with intricate low relief carvings that hint at the activities that may have occurred there. Throughout Mesoamerica, architecture reveals different information over space and time.
The following links will introduce you to important buildings at Teotihuacan, Palenque (Maya), and El Tajín (Veracruz), and the ways in which each building conveyed information about political might and religious power.
The Maya: Powerful Rulers, Dynamic Politics
Although people throughout ancient Mesoamerica created writing systems, Maya hieroglyphic writing is the most thoroughly understood. Texts from the Classic period reveal a dynamic region in which various city-states vied for control over land and resources. Each polity was headed by a ruler (usually male, but sometimes female) who commissioned works of art that emphasized their military strength and ability to connect to the godly realm.
These works could take several forms. Stelae are large upright stones, smoothed into a door-like shape and carved in low relief on one or more sides. Lintels are stones that hang over the doorway, directly above your head as you walk through the door. These were usually carved in low relief. Both stelae and lintels would have been painted.
Maya artists also created ceramic vessels and painted them with elaborate scenes and texts. Combined, these works of art present information about who ruled, and when—but also about the relationships between people, both violent and peaceful.
As you consider this material, remember that these are examples of art commissioned by the elite. Many works would have been seen only by the wealthy or powerful. The “Enthroned Ruler” lintel speaks to the relationship between rulers and their vassals—but it was placed in a doorway of an elite building and would have been difficult to stop and study. This Maya vessel, too, gives viewers a glimpse into the royal court with its depiction of a ruler interacting with attendants. Painted ceramic vessels were typically gifted among members of the elite; the size and detail of the painted vessel help us imagine its viewing in an intimate setting, held in the hands and rotated to see the complete image.
Other works may have been seen by a wider swath of the population. Tikal Stela 16, with its depiction of a Tikal ruler in full ceremonial gear, is a good example. Although carved stone sculptures were generally commissioned by people of high status, ceramic figurines recovered from ancient houses indicate that works of art would have been part of the daily lives of Maya people.
Connecting with the Sacred
Mesoamerican cultures shared beliefs about the animate power of the natural world, the ability of ancestors to interact with living people, and the ritual actions necessary to ensure the cooperation of otherworldly forces and the progression of time. The decipherment of hieroglyphic writing and a long history of excavation in the Maya area have made them a major source of information on Maya deities and belief systems. Ceramic vessels often showcase lively mythological scenes featuring gods, ancestors, and humans. The Maya vessel in this section, for instance, features the rain god, Chahk, and his role in the birth of another deity.
Carved stone sculptures generally feature rulers in addition to gods. Communicating with otherworldly forces was a key source of power for Mesoamerican elites, and sculptures highlight the ability of kings and queens to interact with divine forces. This is the case on the lintels of Yaxchilán, which emphasize the role of Lady Xoc in conjuring a war deity.
While Mesoamerican cultures shared some beliefs related to the divine, we also see diversity. For example, at Monte Alban, a Zapotec site in Oaxaca that flourished between 200 and 600 C.E., a ceramic ancestor figure was probably placed in association with a tomb.
Ancestors were important in Zapotec thought because of their ability to act on behalf of their descendants, and urns like this one may have held burned offerings like incense, blood, chocolate, and pulque, an alcoholic drink made from the maguey plant.
Discerning Everyday Life
Many of the works in this article relate to gods and rulers—but other works of art hint at the daily life of ancient Mesoamerican people. A ceramic dog from the Colima culture of West Mexico was probably placed in a tomb. This object may represent the role of dogs as guardians for the dead on their way to the underworld. Such figures may also have been used as prompts in storytelling, and the dogs themselves were eaten at feasts.
Elsewhere in Mesoamerica, artists created works related to the ballgame. Many cultures in Mesoamerica played ballgames using rubber balls. The games were social events, but also served political and ritual purposes. In Classic Veracruz, both ballcourts and low-relief representations of the game attest to its importance. Often called a “yoke,” this object is probably a ceremonial version of gear worn by ballplayers—and while it may have been placed in an elite tomb, it speaks to the role of games in political, religious, and social life of ancient Mesoamericans.
In the Maya region, too, a rare wooden object provides a look at the people who made up Classic Maya courts. This work represents a kneeling figure who would have held a mirror for a Maya king. The stature and facial features of the figure indicate he is a dwarf. People of short stature were highly valued in Maya royal courts and played a number of roles. This figure is remarkable both because wood rarely survives in the humid lowlands of the Maya region, and because the detailing of his clothes hints at the rich textiles that would have been worn by ancient Maya people.
The material traces that remain from Mesoamerica are incomplete: wood, textiles, and paper are among the many materials that artists worked with between 200 and 900 C.E. that have not survived the subsequent centuries. Yet the architecture, sculpture, and ceramics of Mesoamerican cultures offer compelling insights into the lives of ancient peoples. From connecting to the world of the gods, to negotiating political power, to commemorating feasts and ballgames, the art of Mesoamerica suggests diverse beliefs and practices that resonate with aspects of our lives today.
Originally published by Smarthistory, 06.03.2022, under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International license.