EditorialPre-Columbian Art. Teotihuacan. Mexico. The Temple of the Feathered Serpent, also known as the Temple of Quetzalcoatl, and the Feathered Serpent Pyramid. Detail showing the alternating Tlaloc (left) and feathered serpent (right) heads. Talud-tablero st...
EditorialCenser with the image of the god Tlaloc, the god of rain. Ceramic. Colima style (El Chanal). Early Postclassic Period (900-1250 AD). Western Mexico. Museum of the Americas. Madrid, Spain.
EditorialCenser representing the god of rain Tlaloc. Postclassical period (1300-1521). Mixtec Culture. Ceramic, stucco, tufa and paint. Teotitlan del Camino (State of Oaxaca, Mexico). Dallas Museum of Art, State of Texas. United States.
EditorialCenser representing the god of rain Tlaloc. Postclassical period (1300-1521). Mixtec Culture. Ceramic, stucco, tufa and paint. Teotitlan del Camino (State of Oaxaca, Mexico). Dallas Museum of Art, State of Texas. United States.
EditorialCenser representing the god of rain Tlaloc. Postclassical period (1300-1521). Mixtec Culture. Ceramic, stucco, tufa and paint. Teotitlan del Camino (State of Oaxaca, Mexico). Dallas Museum of Art, State of Texas. United States.
EditorialDetail from the stone stela 31, is the accession monument of Siyaj Chan K'awiil II, also bearing two portraits of his father, Yax Nuun Ayiin, as a youth dressed as a Teotihuacan warrior. He carries a spearthrower in one hand and bears a shield decorate...
EditorialHeads of the rain-god Tlaloc, not a Mayan deity but one usually connected with the Mexican Central Plateau, on the facade of the Palace of the Governor, Uxmal. The cornice is formed by an undulating serpent (7th-10th CE) .
EditorialMaker: Unknown, Vessel in the Shape of Tlaloc, God of?Rain, A.D.?150350, Ceramic with pigment, 24.13 ? 19.685 cm (9 1/2 ? 7 3/4?in.), Made in Mexico, Mexico, Teotihuacan?culture, Early Classic?Period, Containers -?Ceramics.
EditorialCenser representing the god of rain Tlaloc. Postclassical period (1300-1521). Mixtec Culture. Ceramic, stucco, tufa and paint. Teotitlan del Camino (State of Oaxaca, Mexico). Dallas Museum of Art, State of Texas. United States.
EditorialCenser representing the god of rain Tlaloc. Postclassical period (1300-1521). Mixtec Culture. Ceramic, stucco, tufa and paint. Teotitlan del Camino (State of Oaxaca, Mexico). Dallas Museum of Art, State of Texas. United States.
EditorialCenser representing the god of rain Tlaloc. Postclassical period (1300-1521). Mixtec Culture. Ceramic, stucco, tufa and paint. Teotitlan del Camino (State of Oaxaca, Mexico). Dallas Museum of Art, State of Texas. United States.
EditorialStorm God Vessel, 200?700, Mexico, Teotihuacan, Stone, H. 6 3/8 ? W. 4 1/8 ? D. 4 3/8 in. (16.19 ? 10.48 ? 11.11 cm), Stone-Containers, This vessel is carved entirely from steatite, or soapstone. The artist invested a considerable amount of labor in th...
EditorialHeads of the rain-god Tlaloc, not a Mayan deity but one usually connected with the Mexican Central Plateau, on the facade of the Palace of the Governor, Uxmal. The cornice is formed by an undulating serpent (7th-10th CE) .
EditorialMasks of the rain-god Tlaloc, part of the facade of the Palace of the Large Masks, Kabah, Puuc Archaeological Zone, Yucatan. End of Late Classic, 800-900 CE.
EditorialCenser with the image of the god Tlaloc, the god of rain. Ceramic. Colima style (El Chanal). Early Postclassic Period (900-1250 AD). Western Mexico. Museum of the Americas. Madrid, Spain.
EditorialARTE PRECOLOMBINO. CULTURA MIXTECA. MEXICO. CABEZA DEL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA TLALOC. Teotitlan del Camino (Estado de Oaxaca). Periodo Postcl?sico (1300-1500). Museo de Arte de Dallas (Dallas Museum of Art). Estado de Texas. Estados Unidos.
EditorialARTE PRECOLOMBINO. CULTURA MIXTECA. MEXICO. CABEZA DEL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA TLALOC. Teotitlan del Camino (Estado de Oaxaca). Periodo Postcl?sico (1300-1500). Museo de Arte de Dallas (Dallas Museum of Art). Estado de Texas. Estados Unidos.
EditorialARTE PRECOLOMBINO. CULTURA MIXTECA. MEXICO. CABEZA DEL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA TLALOC. Teotitlan del Camino (Estado de Oaxaca). Periodo Postcl?sico (1300-1500). Museo de Arte de Dallas (Dallas Museum of Art). Estado de Texas. Estados Unidos.
EditorialCenser with the image of the god Tlaloc, the god of rain. Ceramic. Colima style (El Chanal). Early Postclassic Period (900-1250 AD). Western Mexico. Museum of the Americas. Madrid, Spain.
EditorialHeads of the rain-god Tlaloc, not a Mayan deity but one usually connected with the Mexican Central Plateau, on the facade of the Palace of the Governor, Uxmal. The cornice is formed by an undulating serpent (7th-10th CE) .
EditorialStorm God Vessel, 200?700, Mexico, Teotihuacan, Stone, H. 6 3/8 ? W. 4 1/8 ? D. 4 3/8 in. (16.19 ? 10.48 ? 11.11 cm), Stone-Containers, This vessel is carved entirely from steatite, or soapstone. The artist invested a considerable amount of labor in th...
EditorialPre-Columbian Art. Teotihuacan. Mexico. The Temple of the Feathered Serpent, also known as the Temple of Quetzalcoatl, and the Feathered Serpent Pyramid. Detail showing the alternating Tlaloc (left) and feathered serpent (right) heads. Talud-tablero style.
EditorialPre-Columbian art. Aztec. Tlaloc. Nahua deity, lord of the land and the god of rain. Monolith at the entrance of the National Museum of Anthropology. Mexico City. Mexico.
EditorialARTE PRECOLOMBINO. CULTURA MIXTECA. MEXICO. CABEZA DEL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA TLALOC. Teotitlan del Camino (Estado de Oaxaca). Periodo Postcl?sico (1300-1500). Museo de Arte de Dallas (Dallas Museum of Art). Estado de Texas. Estados Unidos.
EditorialARTE PRECOLOMBINO. CULTURA MIXTECA. MEXICO. CABEZA DEL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA TLALOC. Teotitlan del Camino (Estado de Oaxaca). Periodo Postcl?sico (1300-1500). Museo de Arte de Dallas (Dallas Museum of Art). Estado de Texas. Estados Unidos.
EditorialARTE PRECOLOMBINO. CULTURA MIXTECA. MEXICO. CABEZA DEL DIOS DE LA LLUVIA TLALOC. Teotitlan del Camino (Estado de Oaxaca). Periodo Postcl?sico (1300-1500). Museo de Arte de Dallas (Dallas Museum of Art). Estado de Texas. Estados Unidos.
EditorialDetail from the stone stela 31, is the accession monument of Siyaj Chan K'awiil II, also bearing two portraits of his father, Yax Nuun Ayiin, as a youth dressed as a Teotihuacan warrior. He carries a spearthrower in one hand and bears a shield decorate...
EditorialTeotihuacan, Temple of Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent, and Tlaloc, the rain-god. Heads of Jaguars, symbol of death, jut out from flowers, symbol of plenitude; the god Tlaloc is shown with a face of corncobs and large goggles (3rd-6th CE) .
EditorialHeads of the rain-god Tlaloc, not a Mayan deity but one usually connected with the Mexican Central Plateau, on the facade of the Palace of the Governor, Uxmal. The cornice is formed by an undulating serpent (7th-10th CE) .