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The statuette shows a seated male figure. The legs are delicate and rather diminutive,[3] with the right leg bent in front of the body and the left folded backward, almost underneath the body. The arms are upraised and, similar to the legs, bent and asymmetrical. Both hands are clenched. In a position unusual for Olmec art, the shoulders are not situated directly above the hips, but twisted slightly to the right, giving the sculpture a sense of movement that is accentuated by the well-defined muscles and the dynamic positioning of the arms.[4]
The head is bald, but it lacks the highly stylized cranial deformation found in many Olmec figurines or the wooden busts of El Manati. The figure wears a mustache and goatee, relatively rare features in Olmec sculpture which appear on only a few reliefs such as La Venta Monument 3.[5]
Originally posted by Signals
reply to post by BeastMaster2012
Holy Cow that looks like an Egyptian headdress!
Thanks for opening up yet another rabbit-hole for me...
(like I needed another one )
Originally posted by BeastMaster2012
I recently bought a photo heavy book on the Olmecs and i was shocked at how their sculptures looked like a total mix of different races, including African, Egyptian, Asian and more.
Originally posted by BeastMaster2012
I present "The Wrestler"!
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/files/0c762e4782d2a3e2.jpg[/atsimg]
en.wikipedia.org...(sculpture)
Originally posted by wylekat
reply to post by BeastMaster2012
Huh- All the Olmec statues I have seen have been 'heavy'.. Broad features, Those huge, thick headpieces, and they always look like they weight a ton, even when they were small enough to hold in your hand.
Was this discovered recently?
Five years later, in October 1970, the statue was stolen from the museum, only later to be found in a motel room in San Antonio, Texas, apparently too famous to be sold on the black market.[9]
It is presently on display at the Museo de Antropología de Xalapa, in Veracruz.