

PROPERTY FROM AN AMERICAN PRIVATE COLLECTION
This robust and regal lord or priest ranks within the small corpus of extremely tall ceramic figures. He stands in a relaxed yet solemn and focused posture, in anticipation of being dressed in elaborate ceremonial garb. His rank and status are revealed by the minimal but significant attire including the finely woven net loincloth with stepped edge, multiple beaded bracelets, sandals, bead necklace and distinctive quincunx earflares. His coiffure has been prepared into a stiff plume of graduated plaits which resemble the avian headdress of kings shown on relief sculptures, and the coiffure of Pacal the Great from Palenque. The body of the present figure retains some of the post-fire blue pigment. Figures have been found in assemblages that illustrated and recorded rites of passage and accession events; this figure may represent the ritual dressing process of a rulership ceremony.
This Jaina figure and the following lot were highlights of the collection of D. Daniel Michel (1902-2004). Michel was one of the early devotees of Pre-Columbian art in the Chicago community starting in the 1960s. He lent these figures and other Mesoamerican art from his collection to the important early exhibitions at The Art Institute of Chicago, the Field Museum of Natural History, and the Arts Club of Chicago.
For a highly similar figure from the Jay C. Leff Collection, see Easby, Ancient Art from Latin America, 1967, fig. 479.