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A work made of ceramic and pigment.

Ritual Impersonator of the Deity Xipe Totec

1450–1500

Aztec (Mexica) Possibly central Veracruz, Mexico

Veracruz state

As a god of the late dry season and early rainy season (May–June), Xipe Totec (“The Flayed One”) expresses regeneration. By the time of Spanish contact in 1519, the cult of this deity was widespread throughout Mesoamerica. This figure depicts a young male wearing the skin of a sacrificed victim, a primary symbolic aspect of rituals conducted during agricultural fertility ceremonies dedicated to this deity. The lines across the chest represent stitched seams where the skin was fastened. Like living seed within a dried husk, the deity impersonator embodies the relationship between death and the renewal of life.

Ceramic and pigment

Arts of the Americas

Latin American