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STYLISTIC Analysis – Olmec head people and Olmec stone head

Write an essay (1-2 pages in length, double-spaced, 12 pt. font) discussing its STYLISTIC significance. Be sure to cover the following points in your analysis:

• Identify the artist, title, period style and medium.

• Analyze the stylistic characteristics (light, line, color, scale, medium & subject matter)

• Why is the artwork stylistically significant? How does it represent its regional, religious or cultural style?

• What stylistic influences can you identify?

• Be sure to apply specific art historical terms (vocabulary) in your answer.

• Use complete sentences and paragraphs including an introduction and conclusion.

Olmec Civilization and Mesoamerica

We will now head south to explore some of the ancient earthworks created in the Mesoamerican region. Latin for "Middle America," Mesoamerica is a term used

to describe the cultures and geographic areas encompassing Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, and El Salvador. Examples of the most prominent civilizations in this

region were the Olmecs, Zaptotecs, Teotihuacános, Mayas, and Aztecs.

The Olmecs are considered to be the earliest Mesoamerican civilization (c. 1400 – 400 BCE). The term Olmec is loosely translated as "the people from the land of

rubber," adopted from the Aztec Nahuatl word "ollin," meaning "Land of rubber".1 The Olmec people made their home along the Gulf Coast region

of southern Mexico, in the areas now known as Veracruz and Tabasco. Often referred to as the "mother culture of Mexico," the Olmec culture, traditions, and

customs were subsequently adopted by neighboring and succeeding peoples such as the Mayas and Aztecs.

Olmec artwork is inextricably linked to daily life and the spiritual world. From monolithic stone sculptures to delicate jadeite celts (tools), the objects they

created spoke volumes about the Olmec perspective of the natural and supernatural realms. One of their most recognized artistic achievements was the construction of

massive stone heads.

This image shows one example of the seventeen colossal stone sculptures discovered along the perimeter of the Olmec capital city San Lorenzo. It is difficult to

imagine how these people were able to transport these twenty- to fifty-ton rocks, quarried from the volcanic basalt rock of the Tuxtla Mountains, over thirty-five

miles to San Lorenzo. The naturalistic faces and heads were carved without metal tools or modern technology — metalwork had not yet been developed in this region. It

is theorized that the artisans employed hard stone and bone tools to carve and chisel the full round compositions, and bamboo to polish the smooth surfaces.

The purposes of these monolithic stone heads are still in question. Once thought to be ballplayers, the sculptures are now generally accepted to be colossal portraits

of their rulers. The heads were placed in a parallel line and positioned facing outward, almost to suggest protection or warding off of evil. Each stone head is

unique, with distinctive facial features and expressions. Some have puffy cheeks and flattened noses, while others have snarling open mouths and almond-shaped eyes.

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