Water-Lily Vessel

Description

The simple, elegant design of this vessel reflects the refined abilities of the artist, who painted images of water lilies and a hieroglyphic text with a perfectly controlled brush. The inscription below was the first to be deciphered on a Classic Maya vessel. It states the name of the artist, Ah Maxam (aj maxam), and declares that he is a member of the royal lineage of the kingdom of Naranjo. His mother and father are also named on this vessel, as well as on other dynastic monuments from the region. For the Maya, water lilies were symbolic of the watery surface of the Underworld and the earth’s regenerative powers.

Provenance

Marianne and Robert Huber, Dixon, IL, by 1969 [according to correspondence from M. Huber, Feb. 14, 1986, and P. Dedrick, Rockford College, Oct. 7 and Oct. 28, 1986, copy in curatorial object file]; sold to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1986.

Water-Lily Vessel

Aj Maxam

780–810

Accession Number

126858

Medium

Earthenware and pigment

Dimensions

23.5 × 16 × 15.8 cm (9 5/16 × 6 5/16 × 6 1/4 in.)

Classification

ceramics

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Ethel T. Scarborough Fund