Male Dog, 200 BC-AD 300. One of the best-known subjects of West Mexican tomb sculpture is the native hairless dog, which is shown naturalistically-as here-but also wearing a human mask, signaling complex meanings are not well-understood, but like later Mesoamericans, West Mexicans may have believed that dogs served as guides or guards in the underworld realm of the dead. For the living, they also served as food.


Size: 3886px × 4527px
Photo credit: © Heritage Images / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: 200, 300, art, bc-ad, burnished, cleveland, colima, comala, earthenware, heritage, mexico, museum, red, sculpture, slip, style, unknown, west