Reclining ballplayer
Life Story
This ceramic figure is among the oldest known representations of a hip-ballplayer. His position, reclining with one hand on the ground, is typical for a hip-ballplayer playing por abajo, low over the ground, although he is represented in a resting pose (cf. Leyenaar and Parsons, 1988: fig. 31). His hip is protected by an open-ended yugo, and his right knee is covered with a pad for protection. The figure wears ear ornaments and a head-dress with avian imagery. Jones (1991: 172) suggests that the bird represented is an eagle rather than an owl as proposed by Gay (1972:32-5, figs. 22a-b; 1979: 46-7, fig. 19), although the beak shape is not unlike that of a parrot. Evidence of breakage on the chest indicates that at one time the figure probably wore a large chest ornament or protective device. Traces of red pigment are visible around the neck and ears.
Entry taken from Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Collection 3 volume catalogue, edited by Steven Hooper (Yale University Press, 1997).
Provenance
Purchased by the Sainsbury Centre, University of East Anglia from David H. Bramhall, New York in 1977 out of funds provided by Robert and Lisa Sainsbury.
On display
Title/Description: Reclining ballplayer
Object Type: Figure
Materials: Pigment, Terracotta
Measurements: h. 170 x w. 130 x d. 140 mm
Accession Number: 672
Historic Period: Formative period (c. 1000 BC)
Production Place: Guerrero, Mesoamerica, Mexico, The Americas
Cultural Group: Xochipala
Credit Line: Purchased with support Robert and Lisa Sainsbury, 1977