Sculpture formed as a slit drum (Teponaztli)

Standort

Location:
Mezzanin: Stories from Mesoamerica

This stone sculpture imitates a so-called slit drum. Slit drums are musical instruments unique to Mesoamerica. A slit drum consists of a hollowed-out wooden cylinder with an H-shaped slit with two cut-out tongues on the top. Sticks are used to produce sounds from them. Such instruments were used to accompany ritual dances, and were frequently decorated with magnificent relief carvings. They were much revered and sometimes stored for centuries in the community centre of a Mexican village. This 15th or early 16th century stone copy is also an indication of the reverence accorded to slit drums. The sculpture depicts a lying male figure, its right hand placed on its chin. It wears the feather head-dress of a high-ranking civil-servant. The wooden model for this stone slit drum comes from Tlaxcala and is now in the Anthropological Museum in Mexico City.

Object data

Inv. No.

6068

Object Name

Sculpture formed as a slit drum (Teponaztli)

Collection

Dominik Bilimek - GND

Dated

ca. 1500

Accession Date

1878

Culture

Azteken

Material

Stone