Ancient Bodies: Transformation, Personhood, and Power in Mesoamerica

Exhibition Website

Apr 12 2018 - Jul 8 2018

In ancient Mesoamerica, people transformed their bodies to express a range of roles in society and to gain access to metaphysical powers. Bodily conversions were achieved gradually over the course of a lifetime, or rapidly by modifying specific body parts or by wearing prestigious objects. As outward expressions of links between the physical world and other dimensions, altered bodies often reflected, and even cultivated, relationships with other people, animals, and supernatural beings.

This installation reconsiders the figurines from LACMA’s collection that were in Ancient Bodies: Archaeological Perspectives on Mesoamerican Figurines (2017–18), alongside several works that are on display for the first time in many years, to present several facets of transformation in ancient Mesoamerica. Highlighting the cycles of life, standards of beauty, war and sport, and funerary rites, the installation demonstrates differing scales of transformation, how it was manifested through relationships with time and with other beings, and how it was embodied in objects that defined status and demonstrated power.

These person-based aspects of transformation are examined in this installation by pairing intimate presentations of individual’s faces against full-bodied figures. This contrast invites the viewer to consider how power is expressed in different areas of the body and how specific modifications to specific body parts guide social relations with people and animals on Earth, as well as in other realms.

Credit: Exhibition overview from museum website 

  • Indigenous
  • Ancient
  • Culture / Lifestyle
  • Americas

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