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Western Mexico shaft tomb tradition - Water Valves - Air Source Treatment Manufacturer

Description

Western Mexico archaeological sites. The orange circles show archaeogical sites. The larger green circles highlight the most important sites. Note that the sites form what has been called the "shaft tomb arc" which extends from northwest Nayarit through the central Jalisco highlands and down to Colima.

The shaft tomb tradition is thought to have developed around 300 BCE. Some shaft tombs predate the tradition by more than 1000 years for example, the shaft tomb at El Opeo in Michoacan has been dated to 1500 BCE but is linked to Central, rather than Western, Mexico. Like much else concerning the tradition, its origins are not well understood, although the valleys around Tequila, Jalisco, which include the archaeological sites of Huitzilapa and Teuchitlan, constitute its "undisputed core". The tradition lasted until at least 300 CE although there is not wide agreement on the end date.

The Western Mexico shaft tombs are characterized by a vertical or nearly vertical shaft, dug 3 to 20 metres down into what is often underlying volcanic tuff. The base of the shaft opens into one or two (occasionally more) horizontal chambers, perhaps 4 by 4 metres (varying considerably), with a low ceiling. The shaft tombs were often associated with an overlying building.

Multiple burials are found in each chamber and evidence indicates that the tombs were used for families or lineages over time. The labor involved in the creation of the shaft tombs along with the number and quality of the grave goods indicate that the tombs were used exclusively by the society's elites, and demonstrate that the shaft tomb cultures were highly stratified at this early date.

An ancestor pair from Nayarit, 100 BCE - 200 CE, executed in the Ixtln del Ro style.

Ceramic figurines and tableaus

Grave goods within these tombs include hollow ceramic figures, obsidian and shell jewelry, semi-precious stones, pottery (which often contained food), and other household implements such as spindle whorls and metates (see this Flickr photo for a reconstruction). More unusual items include conch shell trumpets covered with stucco and other appliques. Unlike those of other Mesoamerican cultures such as the Olmec and the Maya, shaft tomb artifacts carry little to no iconography and so are seemingly bereft of symbolic or religious meaning.

The plentiful ceramic figurines have attracted the most attention, and are among the most dramatic and interesting produced in Mesoamerica. In fact, these ceramics were apparently the primary outlet for artistic expression for the shaft tomb cultures and there is little to no record of associated monumental architecture, stelae, or other public art.

Since the vast majority of these ceramics are without provenance, analysis has largely focused on the ceramics' styles and subjects.

Styles

The major stylistic groups include:

Ixtlan del Rio. These abstract figurines have flat, squarish bodies with highly stylized faces complete with nose rings and multiple earrings. Seated figurines have thin rope-like limbs while the standing figurines have short stocky limbs. One of the first styles to be described, noted ethnographer, and caricaturist Miguel Covarrubias stated that it "reaches the limits of absurd, brutal caricature, a peculiar aesthetic concept that relishes the creation of haunting subhuman monstrosities". Art historian George Kubler finds that "the square bodies, grimacing mouths, and staring eyes convey a disturbing expression which is only in part resolved by the animation and plastic energy of the turgid forms".

A Chinesco-style figurine (Type C), showing the archetypal puffy, slit-like eyes and short tapered legs.

Photo courtesy of M Harrsch

"Chinesca" or "Chinesco" figurines were named by art dealers after their supposed Chinese-like appearance. An early type, Chinesco is identified with Nayarit and up to five major subgroups have been identified, although there is considerable overlap. Type A figurines, the so-called "classic Chinesco", are realistically rendered. One prominent curator, Michael Kan, finds that "their calm, subtle exterior suggests rather than demonstrates emotion". These Type A figures are so similar to one another that is has been suggested that they were the production of a single "school". Types B through E are more abstract, characterized by puffy, slit-like eyes blended into the face, and broad rectangular or triangular heads. These figures are often shown seated or reclining, with shortened bulbous legs quickly tapering to a point.

The Ameca style, associated with Jalisco, is characterized by an elongated face and a high forehead which is often capped by braids or turban-like headgear. The aquiline nose is also elongated and the large eyes are wide and staring, with pronounced rims created by adding separate strips of clay ("fillets") around the eyes. The wide mouth is closed or slightly opened and the large hands have carefully delineated nails. Kubler detects both an early "sheep-faced" style that seem "eroded or melted in the continuous passages of modelling that unite rather than divide the parts of the body" and a later style which are "more animated and more incisively articulated".

Colima ceramics can be identified by their smooth, round forms and their warm brown-red slip. Colima is particularly known for its wide range of animal, especially dog, figurines (see below). Human subjects within the Colima style are more "mannered and less exuberant" than other shaft tomb figurines.

Other styles include El Arenal, San Sebastin, and Zacatecas. Although there is general agreement on style names and characteristics, it is not unanimous. Moreover, these styles often overlap to one degree or another, and many figurines defy categorization.

Subject matter

Common subjects of shaft tomb tradition ceramics are:

Ceramic tableaus showing several or even several dozen people engaged in various seemingly typical activities. Concentrated in highland Nayarit and adjoining Jalisco, these tableaus present rich ethnographic insight into funerary practices, the Mesoamerican ballgame, architecture (most importantly perishable architecture), and perhaps even religious thought during the late Formative period. Some tableaus are almost photographic in their detail and have even been associated with architecture ruins in the field.

A fat (and perhaps fattened) dog from Colima.

Photo courtesy of T Aleto

Ceramic dogs are widely known from looted tombs in Colima. Dogs were generally believed in Mesoamerican cultures to represent soul guides of the dead and several dog ceramics wear human masks. Nonetheless, it should also be noted that dogs were often the major source of animal protein in ancient Mesoamerica.

Ancestor (or marriage) pairs of male and female figurines are common among shaft tomb tradition grave goods. These figurines, perhaps representing ancestors, may be joined or separate and are often executed in the Ixtln del Ro style.

Many shaft tomb figurines, spanning various Western Mexico styles and locations, wear a horn set high on the forehead. Several theories have been advanced for these horns: that they show that the figure is a shaman, that they are abstract conch shells (a not uncommon shaft tomb relic) and as such are an emblem of rulership, or are a phallic symbol. These theories are not mutually exclusive.

Uses

While these ceramics were obviously recovered as grave goods, there is a question of whether they were specifically created for a mortuary rite, or whether they were used prior to burial, perhaps by the deceased. While some ceramics do show signs of wear, it is as yet unclear whether this was the exception or the rule.

A Zacatecas style ceramic figurine showing the distinctive horns (perhaps bundles of hair) found on male figurines. Both male and female figurines display the characteristic flat-top heads and rope-like arms.

Photo courtesy of RightIndex

Context

Western Mexico cultures

Considerable effort has been made connecting the shaft tomb tradition to the Teuchitln tradition, a complex society that occupies much the same geography as the shaft tomb tradition.

Unlike the typical Mesoamerican pyramids and rectangular central plazas, the Teuchitln tradition is marked by central circular plazas and unique conical pyramids. This circular architectural style is seemingly mirrored in the many circular shaft tomb tableau scenes. Known primarily from this architecture, the Teuchitln tradition rises at roughly the same time as the shaft tomb tradition, 300 BCE, but lasts until 900 CE, many centuries after the end of the shaft tomb tradition. The Teuchitln tradition appears to be an outgrowth and elaboration of the shaft tomb tradition.

Mesoamerican cultures

Because western Mexico is on the very periphery of Mesoamerica, it has long been considered outside the Mesoamerican mainstream and the cultures at this time appear to be particularly insulated from many mainstream Mesoamerican influences. For example, no Olmec-influenced artifacts have been recovered from shaft tombs, nor are any Mesoamerican calendars or writing systems in evidence, although some Mesoamerican cultural markers, particularly the Mesoamerican ballgame, are present.

An Ameca-style figurine from Jalisco. The horn is a not-uncommon feature of many tradition figurines. The ball would appear to link the subject to the Mesoamerican ballgame.

Photo courtesy of Zeetz Jones

Despite this, the inhabitants of this area lived much like their Mesoamerican counterparts elsewhere. The usual trio of beans, squash, and maize was supplemented with chiles, manioc and other tubers, various grains, and with animal protein from domestic dogs, turkeys, and ducks, and from hunting. They lived in thatched roof wattle-and-daub houses, grew cotton and tobacco, and conducted some long-distance trade in obsidian and other goods.

Shaft tombs themselves are not encountered elsewhere in Mesoamerica and their nearest counterparts come from northwestern South America.

South American shaft tombs

Shaft tombs also appear in northwestern South America in a somewhat later timeframe than western Mexico (e.g. 200-300 CE in northern Peru, later in other areas). To Dorothy Hosler, Professor of Archaeology and Ancient Technology at MIT, "The physical similarities between the northern South American and West Mexican tomb types are unmistakable." while art historian George Kubler finds that the western Mexican chambers "resemble the shafted tombs of the upper Cauca river in Colombia". However, others disagree that the similarity of form demonstrates cultural linkages -- Karen Olsen Bruhns states that "this sort of contact . . . seems mainly in the (muddled) eye of the synthesizer".

However, other linkages between Western Mexico and northwestern South America have been proposed, in particular the development of metallurgy. See Metallurgy in pre-Columbian Mesoamerica.

A ceramic house showing the distinctive roof associated not only with the shaft tomb cultures but the subsequent Teuchitlan tradition as well. It has been proposed that these models show the house of the living above and attached to the house of the dead.

History of scholarly research

The first major work to discuss artifacts associated with the shaft tomb tradition was Carl Lumholtz's 1902 work, Unknown Mexico. Along with illustrations of several of the grave goods, the Norwegian explorer described a looted shaft tomb he had visited in 1896. He also visited and described the ruins of Tzintzuntzan, the seat of Tarascan empire some 150 miles (250 km) to the east, and was one of the first to incorrectly use the term "Tarascan" to describe the shaft tomb artifacts.

During the 1930s, artist Diego Rivera began accumulating many Western Mexico artifacts for his private collection, a personal interest that sparked a wider public interest in West Mexican grave goods. It was in the late 1930s that one of the most prominent of Western Mexico archaeologists, Isabel Kelly, began her investigations. In the period from 1944 until 1985, Kelly would eventually publish over a dozen scholarly papers on her work in this region. In 1948, she was the first to hypothesize the existence of the "shaft tomb arc", the geographic distribution of shaft tomb sites over western Mexico (see map above).

In 1946, Salvador Toscano challenged the attribution of shaft tomb artifacts to the Tarascans, a challenge that was echoed in 1957 by Miguel Covarrubias who firmly declared that Tarascan culture appeared only "after the 10th century". Toscano's and Covarrubias's views were later upheld by radiocarbon dating of plundered shaft tombs' charcoal and other organic remains salvaged in the 1960s by Diego Delgado and Peter Furst. As the result of these excavations and his ethnological investigations of the modern-day indigenous Huichol and Cora peoples of Nayarit, Furst proposed that the artifacts were not only mere representations of ancient peoples, but also contained deeper significance. The model houses, for example, showed the living dwelling in context with the dead a miniature cosmogram and the horned warriors (as discussed above) were shaman battling mystical forces.

In 1974, Hasso von Winning published an exhaustive classification of Western Mexico shaft tomb artifacts (including, for example, the Chinesco A through D types mentioned above), a classification still largely in use today.

The 1993 discovery of an unlooted shaft tomb at Huitzilapa is the latest major milestone, providing "the most detailed information to date on the funerary customs" associated with shaft tomb tradition.

Notes

An Ameca-style figurine from Jalisco. Height: 22 in (56 cm).

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Western Mexico shaft tomb culture

^ AMNH, , which further cites Butterwick, Kristi (2004) Heritage of Power: Ancient Sculpture from West Mexico, Metropolitan Museum of Art.

^ Kappelman,

^ The International Council of Museum estimates that 90% of the clay figurines come from illegal excavations ICOM.

^ Williams, Classic period page as well as Danien, p. 23. Interestingly enough, there is some evidence (Meighan & Nicholson, p. 42) that many tombs were looted in ancient times.

^ Judy Sund, p. 13.

^ See Townsend, Richard (1998) Ancient West Mexico: Art and Archaeology of the Unknown Past, Thames & Hudson.

Also, in the fourth edition of his Mexico: from the Olmecs to the Aztecs, Michael Coe talks about "our abysmal ignorance of the prehistory of the area", p. 56.

^ The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures says, for example, that "At no time in the pre-Hispanic era did any political or cultural entity impose itself on the whole region, even though certain cultural patterns (such as the building of shaft-and-chamber tombs) have in fact been widely diffused", Michelet p. 328. Beekman (2000, p. 393) makes the same argument.

^ Williams, Classic period page and most other sources give the 300 BCE date. For example, Dominique Michelet in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures says "it probably started earlier" than 200 BCE.

^ Beekman (2000) p. 388 & 394.

^ The proposed end date of the shaft tomb tradition varies considerably. Williams as well as the De Young Museum give a date of 300 CE. The International Council of Museums, on the other hand, provides a date of 500 CE, while the Smithsonian and The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures give 600 CE.

^ Coe et al., p. 102.

Williams, Classic period page.

^ Beekman (2000) p. 388.

^ Covarrubias (1957) p. 87.

^ Christensen.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p. 47.

^ Covarrubias, p. 89-90.

^ Kubler, p. 194.

^ See, e.g., Kubler, p. 194.

^ Meighan and Nicholson state that the Chinesco types "merge in a rather complex fashion", p. 58.

^ Kan. p. 21.

^ Kan, p. 22.

^ Kan, p. 17, who references Peter Furst (1966) "Shaft Tombs, Shell Trumpets and Shamanism", Ph. D. dissertation, UCLA.

^ Kan. p. 22.

^ Covarrubias, p. 91. These "fillets" are often referred to as appliqus.

^ Kubler, p. 193.

^ Metropolitan Museum of Art .

^ Kan, p. 26.

^ See Taylor for discussion of the religious insight offered by these tableaus.

^ Foster et al., p. 47 as well as Wiegand, p. 400.

^ In discussing ceramic types, Kubler, p. 195, refers to the "fattened and edible dogs of Colima".

^ Among many others, see Coe et al., pp. 103104, or Kubler, p. 195.

^ See these photos from Flickr for an example of a mask-wearing Colima dog. Another is part of the Stafford Collection at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (see Sculpture of Ancient West Mexico, Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima).

^ Coe (1994), p. 45 and many others.

^ Metropolitan Museum of Art, .

^ The Las Cebollas tomb contained 125 conch shells (Meighan & Nicholson, p. 39). Beekman (2000) lists conch shell trumpets, along with dogs and horned figures, as three examples of "common symbolic threads" of the shaft tomb tradition.

^ Danien.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p.59.

^ Kan, p. 126.

^ Weigand, p. 402. Weigand contends that the structures of the Teuchitln tradition's ceremonial architecture "are unique in the Mesoamerican architectural repertoire and indeed are not found anywhere else in the world".

^ Beekman (2000) abstract.

^ Beekman (1996), p. 138.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p. 60.

^ Michelet, p. 328.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p. 44.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p. 50. Meighan and Nicholson state that one other example of a shaft tomb complex, dating from the Late Postclassic, 1000 years later, is found in Mixteca Alta.

^ Hosler, p. 16.

^ Kubler, p. 191.

^ Bruhns, p. 368.

^ Hosler's essay focuses on this linkage.

^ Coe, p. 58.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p. 33. Crossley.

^ Sund, p. 2.

^ Meighan and Nicholson, p. 36.

^ See Sund, p. 32.

^ Covarrubias, pp. 97.

^ See Coe, p. 58.

^ Among others, see Meighan and Nicholson, p. 58.

^ Lpez Mestas C. and Jorge Ramos de la Vega, p. 271.

References

A characteristic circular ceramic tableau showing over a dozen musicians and dancers.

American Museum of Natural History, "Mexican and Central American Virtual Hall", accessed April 2008.

Beekman, Christopher S. (1996). "Political Boundaries and Political Structure: The Limits of the Teuchitlan Tradition" (PDF online facsimile). Ancient Mesoamerica (London and New York: Cambridge University Press) 7 (1): pp.135147. doi:10.1017/S0956536100001346. ISSN 0956-5361. OCLC 88113895. http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~cbeekman/articles/am96pap.pdf. 

Beekman, Christopher S. (December 2000). "The Correspondence of Regional Patterns and Local Strategies in Formative to Classic Period West Mexico" (PDF online facsimile). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology (Orlando, FL: Academic Press) 19 (4): pp.385412. doi:10.1006/jaar.1999.0354. ISSN 0278-4165. OCLC 201247825. http://carbon.cudenver.edu/~cbeekman/articles/jaa00.pdf. 

Bruhns, Karen Olsen (1994) Ancient South America, Cambridge World Archaeology series, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521277617.

Christensen, Alexander F. (1999) "Review of Ancient West Mexico: Art and Archaeology of the Unknown Past", Ethnohistory, Vol 46, No 3, pp. 627-630.

Coe, Michael (1994) Mexico, from the Olmecs to the Aztecs, Fourth Edition, Thames and Hudson, ISBN 0-500-27722-2.

Coe, Michael and Dean Snow and Elizabeth Benson (1986) Atlas of Ancient America; Facts on File, New York.

Covarrubias, Miguel (1957) Indian Art of Mexico and Central America, Alfred A. Knopf, New York.

Crossley, Mimi, "Unknown Mexico/Mxico Desconocido", accessed June 2008.

Danien, Elin (2004) "On the Dilemma of a Horn: the Horned Shamans of West Mexico" in Expedition - Philadelphia, Vol 46, pp. 22-35.

Foster, Michael (2000) Greater Mesoamerica: The Archaeology of West and Northwest Mesoamerica, University of Utah Press, ISBN 978-0874806557.

Hosler, Dorothy (1995) The Sounds and Colors of Power: The Sacred Metallurgical Technology, The MIT Press, ISBN 978-0262082303

Internation Council of Museums Red List, "Nayarit figures (Mexico)", accessed April 2008.

Lpez Mestas C., Lorenza and Jorge Ramos de la Vega (2006) Some Interpretations of the Huitzilapa Shaft Tomb", in Ancient Mesoamerica, vol. 17, pp. 271-281.

Kan, Michael (1989) "The Pre-Columbian Art of West Mexico: Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima" in Sculpture of Ancient West Mexico, Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima, Los Angelese County Museum of Art, University of New Mexico Press, ISBN 0-8263-1175-x.

Kappelman, Julia "Art 347L Mesoamerican Art Syllabus: West Mexico", accessed April 2008.

Kubler, George (1984) The Art and Architecture of Ancient America: The Mexican, Maya and Andean Peoples, Pelican History of Art, Yale University Press, ISBN 0300053258.

Meighan, Clement W.; H. B. Nicholson (1989) "The Ceramic Mortuary Offerings of Prehistoric West Mexico: an Archaeological Perspective" in Sculpture of Ancient West Mexico, Nayarit, Jalisco, Colima, Los Angelese County Museum of Art, University of New Mexico Press, ISBN 0-8263-1175-x.

Michelet, Dominique (2000) "Western Mexico" in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Mesoamerican Cultures, David Carrasco, ed., Catherine Sifel, Marhe Imber, translators, Oxford University Press, pp. 328-333, ISBN 978-0195142570.

Metropolitan Museum of Art, Timeline of Art History, accessed April 2008.

Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian (2005) Born of Clay: Ceramics from the National Museum of the American Indian, NMAI Editions, ISBN 1933565012.

Sund, Judy (2000) "Beyond the Grave: The Twentieth-Century Afterlife of West Mexican Burial Effigies", the Art Bulletin.

Taylor, R. E. (1970) "The Shaft Tombs of Western Mexico: Problems in the Interpretation of Religious Function in Nonhistoric Archaeological Contexts", in American Antiquity, Vol. 35, No. 2 (Apr., 1970), pp. 160169.

Toscano, Salvador (1946) "El Arte y la Historia del Occidente en Mexico" in Arte Precolombino del Occidente de Mexico, Salvador Toscano, Paul Kirchoff, Daniel Rubin de la Borbolla, eds., Palacio de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, pp. 9-33.

Weigand, Phil (2001) "West Mexico Classic" in Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Vol 5, Peter Peregrine (ed), ISBN 978-0306462597.

Williams, Eduardo "Prehispanic West Mxico: A Mesoamerican Culture Area", Foundation for the Advancement of Mesoamerican Studies, Inc. (FAMSI), accessed April 2008.

See also

Naguals, mythical shape-shifters often portrayed on West Mexico ceramics.

External links

A Chinesco ancestor pair at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

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Categories: Mesoamerican cultures | Nayarit | Colima | Jalisco | Pre-Columbian art

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XL Framed American Ruins Chaco Canyon New Mexico Repro Canvas Art Print LE COA
Paypal   US $1,053.95
HOLIDAY IN MEXICO 46 Jane Powell Krapalik Art 3Sht
HOLIDAY IN MEXICO 46 Jane Powell Krapalik Art 3Sht
Paypal   US $1,000.00
Superb Old Oil Painting on Canvas of Virgin Mary with Crown FOLK ART MEXICO
Superb Old Oil Painting on Canvas of Virgin Mary with Crown FOLK ART MEXICO
Paypal   US $1,000.00
JOY LAVILLE 303 england mexico art original print signd
JOY LAVILLE 303 england mexico art original print signd
Paypal   US $1,000.00
ELIZABETH SANDIA ORIGINAL PASTEL ART NEW MEXICO CHURCH CONCEPCION 12 X 15 FRAMED
ELIZABETH SANDIA ORIGINAL PASTEL ART NEW MEXICO CHURCH CONCEPCION 12 X 15 FRAMED
Paypal   US $999.99
CUBAN PAINTING BY LUIS ULISES GARCIA EXHIBITED AT MUSEUM OF MODERN ART MEXICO
CUBAN PAINTING BY LUIS ULISES GARCIA EXHIBITED AT MUSEUM OF MODERN ART MEXICO
Paypal   US $950.00
VIRGIN OF GUADALUPE 5314 135cm FOLK ART VIRGEN DE MEXICO OUR LADY OF MEXICAN
VIRGIN OF GUADALUPE 5314 135cm FOLK ART VIRGEN DE MEXICO OUR LADY OF MEXICAN
Paypal   US $901.18
Mata Ortiz Pottery Tavo Silveira Ceramics Mexico Art Best In Show Award Artist
Mata Ortiz Pottery Tavo Silveira Ceramics Mexico Art Best In Show Award Artist
Paypal   US $880.00
Louis De Mayo Strangers In Taos HAND SIGNED FINE ART Serigraph new mexico OBO
Louis De Mayo Strangers In Taos HAND SIGNED FINE ART Serigraph new mexico OBO
Paypal   US $810.00
Ann Taylor Chichen Itza Signed Original Art Lithograph Mayan Pyramid Mexico OBO
Ann Taylor Chichen Itza Signed Original Art Lithograph Mayan Pyramid Mexico OBO
Paypal   US $775.00
Lucille Kent Taxco Street Scene Mexico 1958 Oil Painting California Art
Lucille Kent Taxco Street Scene Mexico 1958 Oil Painting California Art
Paypal   US $750.00
New Mexico Folk Art Stichery Painting Helenn Rumpel
New Mexico Folk Art Stichery Painting Helenn Rumpel
Paypal   US $750.00
Lost In Space Original Painting Aliens UFO Roswell New Mexico Michael Young Art
Lost In Space Original Painting Aliens UFO Roswell New Mexico Michael Young Art
Paypal   US $750.00
AMBER JEWELRY SET Mexico Silver Art Earrings  Necklace
AMBER JEWELRY SET Mexico Silver Art Earrings Necklace
Paypal   US $733.99
DOOR in ADOBE WALL Watercolor Painting Mexico Fine Art
DOOR in ADOBE WALL Watercolor Painting Mexico Fine Art
Paypal   US $733.46
Vtg LOS CASTILLO Taxco SILVER IGUANA Lizard METAL ART Mexico CHAMELEON Very Cool
Vtg LOS CASTILLO Taxco SILVER IGUANA Lizard METAL ART Mexico CHAMELEON Very Cool
Paypal   US $699.99
Art Deco Sanborns Mexico Sterling Silver Dish Leaf Hallmarked
Art Deco Sanborns Mexico Sterling Silver Dish Leaf Hallmarked
Paypal   US $695.00
VINTAGE TAXCO MEXICO MEXICAN STERLING SILVER JADE ART DECO NECKLACE 15596
VINTAGE TAXCO MEXICO MEXICAN STERLING SILVER JADE ART DECO NECKLACE 15596
Paypal   US $695.00
Richard Thomsen California Art Mexico Scene Painting
Richard Thomsen California Art Mexico Scene Painting
Paypal   US $652.62
Diego Rivera ART IN ANCIENT MEXICO 1st in DJ 1941
Diego Rivera ART IN ANCIENT MEXICO 1st in DJ 1941
Paypal   US $650.00
1974 Cuban Original Movie PosterPlakatAfficheaffischChicken CowMexico Art
1974 Cuban Original Movie PosterPlakatAfficheaffischChicken CowMexico Art
Paypal   US $650.00
Paul A Wilson New Mexico Artist Watercolor Original Art
Paul A Wilson New Mexico Artist Watercolor Original Art
Paypal   US $637.50
REPRIEVE Mexico Fine Art Orig Abstract Painting NOVICA
REPRIEVE Mexico Fine Art Orig Abstract Painting NOVICA
Paypal   US $616.46
DANCE Original Abstract Painting Mexico Fine Art
DANCE Original Abstract Painting Mexico Fine Art
Paypal   US $602.96
Stunning Bencomo 20 Studio Art Glass Bowl Jalisco Mexico Museum Quality 20 lbs
Stunning Bencomo 20 Studio Art Glass Bowl Jalisco Mexico Museum Quality 20 lbs
Paypal   US $600.00
ART E DE MEXICO SPANISH STYLE BURGUNDY FLORAL LEATHER COUCH SOFA W PILLOWS
ART E DE MEXICO SPANISH STYLE BURGUNDY FLORAL LEATHER COUCH SOFA W PILLOWS
Paypal   US $699.99
Vintage 1960s 70s Mexico Modernist Taxco DELFINO Sterling  Art Glass PENDANT
Vintage 1960s 70s Mexico Modernist Taxco DELFINO Sterling Art Glass PENDANT
Paypal   US $599.99
OLD TAXCO MEXICO COPPER COVERED BOWL GERARDO LOPEZ 1930 LATE ART DECO ERA PERIOD
OLD TAXCO MEXICO COPPER COVERED BOWL GERARDO LOPEZ 1930 LATE ART DECO ERA PERIOD
Paypal   US $599.00
MEDUSA Orig Abstract Painting Mexico Fine Art NOVICA
MEDUSA Orig Abstract Painting Mexico Fine Art NOVICA
Paypal   US $560.66
1973 Cuban Movie PosterREEDMEXICO INSURGENTMexican CharroPancho VillaArt
1973 Cuban Movie PosterREEDMEXICO INSURGENTMexican CharroPancho VillaArt
Paypal   US $550.00
VTG SIGNED CHIMAYO RUG Wool Textile Weaving New Mexico SPANISH COLONIAL ART
VTG SIGNED CHIMAYO RUG Wool Textile Weaving New Mexico SPANISH COLONIAL ART
Paypal   US $550.00
RARE Santa Fe New Mexico Native Non Traditional OUTSIDER ART Slab Pottery TRUCK
RARE Santa Fe New Mexico Native Non Traditional OUTSIDER ART Slab Pottery TRUCK
Paypal   US $550.00
Original Painting Virgin of Guadalupe Caribbean Naive Mexico Art Folk Morillo
Original Painting Virgin of Guadalupe Caribbean Naive Mexico Art Folk Morillo
Paypal   US $519.95
BEAUTIFUL RARE MEXICAN FOLK ART FANTASIA POTTERY PITCHER ANTIQUE BLUE MEXICO
BEAUTIFUL RARE MEXICAN FOLK ART FANTASIA POTTERY PITCHER ANTIQUE BLUE MEXICO
Paypal   US $500.00
RARE VERY COLLECTABLE 1940S SIGNED TAXCO MEXICO BRACELET  CHOKER METAL ART
RARE VERY COLLECTABLE 1940S SIGNED TAXCO MEXICO BRACELET CHOKER METAL ART
Paypal   US $500.00
3 FOOTED STERLING SILVER 7 BOWL MARKED ART STERLING MEXICO ESTATE FIND
3 FOOTED STERLING SILVER 7 BOWL MARKED ART STERLING MEXICO ESTATE FIND
Paypal   US $499.99
Emilia Castillo New Silver Plated Hummingbird Vase Mexico Art Inca Collection
Emilia Castillo New Silver Plated Hummingbird Vase Mexico Art Inca Collection
Paypal   US $499.00
Mata Ortiz Mexican Clay Pottery Daniel Gonzalez Artist Mexico Southwest Art Pot
Mata Ortiz Mexican Clay Pottery Daniel Gonzalez Artist Mexico Southwest Art Pot
Paypal   US $480.00
SKELETON FISH STERLING SILVER CUFF BRACELET Novica Mexico Handmade ART Exquisite
SKELETON FISH STERLING SILVER CUFF BRACELET Novica Mexico Handmade ART Exquisite
Paypal   US $609.95
19TH CENTURY ANTIQUE MEXICAN MEXICO WOOD MASK FOLK ART
19TH CENTURY ANTIQUE MEXICAN MEXICO WOOD MASK FOLK ART
Paypal   US $469.95
Vintag Signed Hector Aguilar Art Deco Taxco Mexico 990 Sterling Silver 7 Spoon
Vintag Signed Hector Aguilar Art Deco Taxco Mexico 990 Sterling Silver 7 Spoon
Paypal   US $450.00
Arte De Mexico Hanging Light Fixture 79 OFF RETAIL
Arte De Mexico Hanging Light Fixture 79 OFF RETAIL
Paypal   US $449.00
Reaper Girl by Mouse Lopez Prison Art Death Mask Canvas Print Artwork Mexico
Reaper Girl by Mouse Lopez Prison Art Death Mask Canvas Print Artwork Mexico
Paypal   US $439.00
Voodoo Doll by Mouse Lopez Prison Art Witchcraft Canvas Print Artwork Mexico
Voodoo Doll by Mouse Lopez Prison Art Witchcraft Canvas Print Artwork Mexico
Paypal   US $439.00
Amor Azteca by Mouse Lopez Prison Art Aztec Indian Canvas Print Artwork Mexico
Amor Azteca by Mouse Lopez Prison Art Aztec Indian Canvas Print Artwork Mexico
Paypal   US $439.00
FIRE GLOW Hand Woven ZAPOTEC WOOL AREA RUG 4x65 Novica Mexico Art NWT
FIRE GLOW Hand Woven ZAPOTEC WOOL AREA RUG 4x65 Novica Mexico Art NWT
Paypal   US $552.95
Vintage STUNNING ART DECO MEXICO Sterling Silver HINGED CLAMPER BRACELET TAXCO
Vintage STUNNING ART DECO MEXICO Sterling Silver HINGED CLAMPER BRACELET TAXCO
Paypal   US $425.00
Clay figure Day of the Dead theme mexico art Skeleton in a dress Sculpture
Clay figure Day of the Dead theme mexico art Skeleton in a dress Sculpture
Paypal   US $419.00
Santa Fe New Mexico Zazenski art Original Painting Cert
Santa Fe New Mexico Zazenski art Original Painting Cert
Paypal   US $403.75
Emilia Castillo Silver Plated Bowl New Mexico Art Sphere Collection
Emilia Castillo Silver Plated Bowl New Mexico Art Sphere Collection
Paypal   US $400.00
Fine Art Photography White SandsNew Mexico S N Silver gelatin
Fine Art Photography White SandsNew Mexico S N Silver gelatin
Paypal   US $399.00
Exquisite CUFFLINKS Signed 14K Gold STERLING SILVER Intricate MEXICO Vintage ART
Exquisite CUFFLINKS Signed 14K Gold STERLING SILVER Intricate MEXICO Vintage ART
   US $399.00
New Blue Mara 16 Piece Seashell Art Dinner Dish Set Made in Mexico
New Blue Mara 16 Piece Seashell Art Dinner Dish Set Made in Mexico
Paypal   US $396.00
WAVES Sterling Silver DESIGNER BRACELET Mexico ART NEW
WAVES Sterling Silver DESIGNER BRACELET Mexico ART NEW
Paypal   US $391.46
Antique Gold Silver Crown of Thorns for Catholic Colonial Art Saint Santo Mexico
Antique Gold Silver Crown of Thorns for Catholic Colonial Art Saint Santo Mexico
Paypal   US $382.50
Mata Ortiz Pottery Tavo Silveira Ceramics Mexico Art Lizard Design Casas Grandes
Mata Ortiz Pottery Tavo Silveira Ceramics Mexico Art Lizard Design Casas Grandes
Paypal   US $380.00
RARE 1971 Vintage Kitsch Art VELVET Painting BEATLES from Acapulco Mexico
RARE 1971 Vintage Kitsch Art VELVET Painting BEATLES from Acapulco Mexico
Paypal   US $375.00
Mata Ortiz Pottery Hector Gallegos Ceramics Museum Quality Mexico Fine Folk Art
Mata Ortiz Pottery Hector Gallegos Ceramics Museum Quality Mexico Fine Folk Art
Paypal   US $360.00
Chespirito Gomez Bolaños El Chavo del Ocho 8 signed photo Mexico Puerto Rico Art
Chespirito Gomez Bolaños El Chavo del Ocho 8 signed photo Mexico Puerto Rico Art
Paypal   US $350.00
2 Orig NOEL ESPINOZA Black Velvet Paintings MEXICO ART Mariachi Boy Dancing Girl
2 Orig NOEL ESPINOZA Black Velvet Paintings MEXICO ART Mariachi Boy Dancing Girl
Paypal   US $350.00
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