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Collections

Celt with Maize Kernel1000–400 BCE

Not on view
Carved stone object, ovoid form in mottled sage green and black with incised grid lines across the domed surface
Polished stone object with an elongated oval form, mottled green and black with reddish-tan tones, featuring three horizontal incised grooves encircling the upper half.

Unknown, Celt with Maize Kernel, 1000–400 BCE, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Gift of Constance McCormick Fearing, photo © Museum Associates/LACMA

Title
Celt with Maize Kernel
Culture
Olmec
Place Made
Mexico
Date Made
1000–400 BCE
Medium
Serpentine and pigment
Dimensions
4 1/2 x 2 1/4 x 1 1/2 in. (11.43 x 5.72 x 3.81 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Constance McCormick Fearing
Accession Number
AC1998.209.58
Classification
Stone
Collecting Area
Art of the Ancient Americas
Curatorial Notes

From the earliest Mesoamerican societies, jade served as an enduring symbol of maize, the region’s staple crop. The natural variety in jade’s spectrum of colors, ranging from dewey blues to yellowed greens, emulates the agricultural cycle, from new growth to maturity and dormancy. Ceremonial caches of kernel-shaped jade axes, or celts, such as the one seen here, have been found at Olmec and Formative Maya sites, where they were deposited as dedicatory offerings in public plazas. The arrangement of such caches in quadripartite patterns replicates the shape of both the Mesoamerican cosmos and the milpa, or maize field, conferring eternal abundance upon the spaces where they lie.

Alyce de Carteret

2024

Selected Bibliography
  • Magaloni, Diana, Davide Domenici, and Alyce de Carteret. We Live in Painting: the Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2024.