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Bowl with Grasshopper

1000–1130

The Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, United States

The Mogollon of New Mexico’s Mimbres region created thousands of hemispheric bowls painted with black-and-white designs on their interiors. The designs range from elegant geometric motifs to abstract humans and animals. Meaning may have dwelled in part in the domed shape of the bowls, which often were ritually punctured before they were placed over the heads of the deceased in graves. (This example comes from a non-funerary context.) Perhaps, like the modern Pueblo peoples who descend from them, the Mimbres believed that the sky is a dome pierced to allow passage between worlds, such as between the realms of the living and the dead.

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  • Title: Bowl with Grasshopper
  • Date Created: 1000–1130
  • Physical Dimensions: Overall: 8 x 18.8 cm (3 1/8 x 7 3/8 in.)
  • Provenance: Museum of New Mexico, Santa Fe, NM, 1930, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, The Cleveland Museum of Art
  • Type: Ceramic
  • Rights: CC0
  • External Link: https://clevelandart.org/art/1930.47
  • Medium: ceramic, slip
  • Fun Fact: In this ancient Mimbres bowl, a whimsical desert grasshopper combines both realistic and abstract elements
  • Department: Art of the Americas
  • Culture: Southwest, New Mexico, Cameron Creek village, Mimbres, Mogollon
  • Credit Line: Charles W. Harkness Endowment Fund
  • Collection: AA - Native North America
  • Accession Number: 1930.47
The Cleveland Museum of Art

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