The Huastec inhabitated the northern part of the Gulf Coast. The territory they occupied at the height of their expansion corresponds roughly to the modern states of Veracruz, San Luis Potosí, Hidalgo and Tamaulipas. It was a very fertile region where cotton was an important crop and one of the principal items of tribute and trade.
Fertility is a recurring theme in Huastec art, represented by stone sculptures of female goddesses, elderly men and phalluses. The female figures are associated with Tlazolteotl, an earth goddess also venerated by the Mexica, who conquered the Gulf Coast in the fifteenth century. Representations of Tlazolteotl are found in codices, pottery figurines and engraved on shell pendants.
These female sculptures share similar characteristics, such as a rigid posture, hands over their stomachs, bare breasts, long skirt and large headdress. The headdress is generally composed of a rectangular section with a conical cap on top and a fan-shaped crest. However, in this example, there are no indications of clothing and the fan-shaped crest is carved on the back of the head.