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Collections

Salvador Terán
Sun and Moon Pendant (Colgajo con el sol y la luna)circa 1955-1960

Not on view
Silver pendant with sun-and-moon design, featuring a cream-colored carved face at center, radiating pointed rays and beaded rods within a circular frame, with twisted bail at top
Artist or Maker
Salvador Terán
Mexico, 1920-1974
Title
Sun and Moon Pendant (Colgajo con el sol y la luna)
Date Made
circa 1955-1960
Medium
Silver, bone
Dimensions
3/8 × 2 7/8 in. (0.95 × 7.3 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Ronald A. Belkin, Long Beach, California
Accession Number
M.2018.68.51
Classification
Jewelry and Adornments
Collecting Area
Latin American Art
Curatorial Notes

Like many of his contemporaries, Salvador Terán had a keen interest in Mesoamerican art. This silver and bone pendant design of the sun and the moon—which Terán also adapted to earrings (M.2015.249.9a-b) and brooches (M.2013.211.3)—recalls images in the famous sixteenth-century Florentine Codex in which Indigenous artists portrayed the celestial bodies as anthropomorphic beings with faces (https://florentinecodex.getty.edu/book/7/folio/7r?spTexts=&nhTexts=).

Terán began silversmithing as an apprentice at William Spratling’s Taller de Las Delicias (established in 1935) in Taxco, Mexico, before branching out with his cousins, the Castillo brothers (see 2014.161), to form their own workshop in 1939. In 1952, Terán opened a studio in Mexico City and started creating designs under his own name.

Rachel Kaplan

2024