Encounters
Faces of the Ancient Americas
To 16th-century European observers, artifacts of indigenous Mesoamerican and South American peoples possessed a scintillating foreignness that was simultaneously alluring and frightening. The perceived primitiveness of these objects persisted for centuries, with the first exhibitions of Ancient American art not appearing in the United States until the 1930s and ‘40s. On view in the Gump Family Gallery, Encounters: Faces of the Ancient Americas features 27 works of art drawn from the Museum’s sizeable holdings—a rare collegiate collection that matches the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s in longevity. Disentangled from lingering biases and misconceptions, these objects represent the sophistication and technological achievements of cultures that flourished from the 5th century BCE until European contact after 1492.
The ceramics on view in this exhibition are dominated by faces—images of people from the West Mexican grasslands, the Yucatán Peninsula, and the arid coastal plains along the base of the Andes—constructing a sense of their unique cultural identities. Each face represents a member of an individual society with independent religious systems and civic structures, ranging from the extensive cities of the Maya to the small chiefdoms of the Nasca. Although distinctive and diverse, the ceramics of these cultures reveal a similar reliance on the land and a devotion to preserving the human form in clay. Examining images of men and women, shamans and deities, and flora and fauna, Encounters offers a window into the lives and beliefs of the ancient Americas, while highlighting some rarely exhibited gems of the MHCAM collection.
Curated by Rachel G. Beaupre, Assistant Curator
Events And Links
Gallery talk by Rachel Beaupré, Assistant Curator and exhibition curator