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A work made of ceramic and pigment.

Jar with Horned Serpents and Interlocking, Hatched-and-Black Stepped Designs

950–1400

Ancestral Pueblo (Anasazi), Socorro Black-on-white West-central New Mexico, United States

New Mexico

Horned or plumed serpents, mythical entities associated with the life-giving power of water, have an ancient history in the art of the American Southwest, Midwest, and Southeast. On the shoulder of this vessel, twin highly abstract serpents stretch out from a central point, from which rises a series of superimposed stepped chevrons. The chevron is a symbolic motif widely associated with mountains, springs, rivers, and rising thunderstorms. The overall composition of this jar suggests the symbolic representation of a sacred landscape and the ritual summoning of water.

Ceramic and pigment

Arts of the Americas