Mystery of the Olmec
THE MAYA AND AZTECS BASED THEIR ART AND CULTURE ON THESE LITTLE-KNOWN PEOPLE; A NEW EXHIBITION SHOWS WHY
Michael D. Lemonick
More than 1,500 years before the Maya flourished in Central America,
25 centuries before the Aztecs conquered large swaths of Mexico, the mysterious
Olmec
people were building the first great culture of Mesoamerica. Starting
in 1200 B.C. in the steamy jungles of Mexico's southern Gulf Coast, the
Olmec's influence
spread as far as modern Guatemala, Honduras, Belize, Costa Rica and
El Salvador. They built large settlements, established elaborate trade
routes and developed
religious iconography and rituals, including ceremonial ball games,
blood-letting and human sacrifice, that were adapted by all the Mesoamerican
civilizations to
follow.
And then, about 300 B.C., their civilization vanished. No one knows
why. But they left behind some of the finest artworks ever produced in
ancient America, the
most spectacular of which will be on display at the National Gallery
of Art in Washington starting next week. Titled "Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico,"
the exhibition is
the first comprehensive survey of Olmec artifacts, ranging from palm-size
jade carvings to a 10-ton, monumental stone head. For the next four months,
visitors will be able to see treasures that have never before been permitted
to leave Mexico. "It's amazing," says one of the show's curators, Peter
David Joralemon of
Pre-Columbian Art Research Associates in New York City. "The only major
Olmec objects left in Mexico are the ones that are too fragile to travel."
For historians the artworks are much more than gorgeous museum pieces.
If the Olmec ever had a written language, all traces of it have disappeared.
Even their
bones are gone, rotted long ago in the humid rain forest. Virtually
everything that scholars know about them is based on the remains of cities
and on comparisons
between their artifacts and imagery and those of later civilizations.
It isn't surprising, therefore, that while the experts have plenty of theories
about the Olmec's origins, social structure and religion, few of these
ideas are universally accepted.
What scholars do know is that the ancestors of the Olmec, like those
of all Native Americans, were Asian hunter-gatherers who crossed into the
Americas at least
12,000 years ago, at the end of the most recent ice age. Bits of ancient
garbage and the remains of mud buildings hint that by about 2000 B.C.,
some of their
descendants had settled in what is now the Mexican states of Veracruz
and Tabasco, living in small fishing villages along the region's rivers.
By then, says Richard Diehl, an Olmec expert at the University of Alabama-Tuscaloosa,
"we know that they had adapted to the environment and probably
supplemented their diet with cultivated plants, such as maize and beans.
And we know they became more and more dependent on agriculture, perhaps
because the
population was increasing."
But archaeologists don't know what transformed a society of farmers
into the class-based social structure of the Olmec, with their leaders
and commoners, bosses
and laborers, artisans and priests. Diehl theorizes that it was population
pressure and that as the pre-Olmec villages grew, they naturally stratified.
"A new elite class
probably asserted its leadership through charisma, control of trade
networks and control of people, all of which led to the evolution of a
complex society and,
eventually, the art style we call Olmec."
It's a plausible scenario, at least. But whatever the reason, Olmec
society was in full flower by 1200 B.C., at a place known as San Lorenzo,
on a fertile plain
overlooking the Chiquito River. Like all the known Olmec sites, San
Lorenzo is much less impressive than the Mayan cities that dot the Yucatan
peninsula to the east. One reason: it supported only a few thousand people,
rather than 100,000 or more. The major buildings and plazas were little
more than earthen mounds covered with grass, lacking any sort of masonry
facade and probably topped with pole-and-thatch houses.
The sites were also built on a fairly modest scale: the Great Pyramid
at La Venta, a site that arose around 800 B.C., is just 100 ft. high, about
half the size of the
tallest Mayan pyramid at Chichen Itza. Still, each Olmec site was laid
out according to a preconceived plan, a fact that reflects both the people's
religious beliefs and
a fairly sophisticated knowledge of engineering. All the mounds at
La Venta, for example, are oriented precisely 8º west of north.
San Lorenzo shows clear evidence of class structure, according to Ann
Cyphers, an Olmec scholar at Mexico's National Autonomous University, with
more
elaborate housing for the upper classes and simpler accommodations
for the middle class and the poor. There were also, observes Cyphers, workshops
for
producing artifacts, and irrigation and drainage systems. "All these
things show a society of great complexity," she says.
That complexity, however, may not have extended to Olmec politics. Rather
than a single, unified state, says one school of archaeological thought,
the Olmec were
little more than a glorified collection of chiefdoms. Indeed, Diehl
prefers the term Olman instead of Olmec to avoid implying that there was
a single linguistic or
political entity. "There just isn't any evidence for this," he insists.
"There were probably a number of different populations, forming groups
that rose and fell over time
and shifted alliances. I don't think there was any political integration."
No one knows whether the major cities--San Lorenzo, La Venta and Tres Zapotes--traded
with one another, or even co-existed.
Art historians and archaeologists agree, however, that the Olmec produced
the earliest sophisticated art in Mesoamerica and that their distinctive
style provided a
model for the Maya, Aztec and other later civilizations in the region.
According to Joralemon, small-scale Olmec objects made prior to 900 B.C.
tend to be ceramic,
whereas later pieces were often fashioned of jade and serpentine, rare
materials that required great skill to carve. The vast majority of Olmec
artifacts are
sculptures--figurines, decorated stone stelae, votive axes, altars
and the like--some of which were polished to a mirror-like shine.
Human figures from the earliest period tend to wear simple, understated
costumes, while later ones are more embellished. The purpose of the objects
changed as
well. The ceramics were simply sculptures, while the jade pieces were
often intended for rulers to wear. Explains Joralemon: "They were clearly
a display of personal
wealth, an indication of status and prestige"-- evidence, he suggests,
that the society may have been growing increasingly stratified.
Recurring images in Olmec art--dragons, birds, dwarfs, hunchbacks and,
most important, the "were-jaguar" (part human, part jaguar)--indicate a
belief in the
supernatural and in shamanism. Olmec-style human figures typically
have squarish facial features with full lips, a flat nose, pronounced jowls
and slanting eyes
reminiscent (at least to early travelers in the region) of African
or Chinese peoples. Archaeologists have found household objects as well,
but they tend to be broken.
As a result, laments Joralemon, "we know relatively little about the
common Olmec."
The most famous Olmec artifacts are 17 colossal stone heads, presumed
to have been carved between 1200 B.C. and 900 B.C. Cut from blocks of volcanic
basalt,
the heads, which range in height from 5 ft. to 11 ft. and weigh as
much as 20 tons, are generally thought to be portraits of rulers. Archaeologists
still have not
determined how the Olmec transported the basalt from quarries to various
settlements as far as 80 miles away--and, in San Lorenzo, hoisted it to
the top of a plateau some 150 ft. high. "It must have been an incredible
engineering effort," Joralemon says. "These people didn't have beasts of
burden, and they didn't have wheels. We don't know if they floated the
blocks on rafts or traveled over land."
There is still hope that archaeologists can solve this mystery, as well
as dozens of other unanswered questions about the Olmec. Most of the sites
have barely been
studied, and with good reason. Annual floods smother the land with
thick layers of silt that dry into impenetrable clay. What's more, says
Diehl, "about 80% of the
entire Olmec territory in southern Mexico has been converted in the
past 20 years from jungle to cow pastures and sugar-cane fields. There's
so much vegetation on
the surface that you can't just pick up pottery. Generally, you can't
even see the ground." Beyond that, the hot, humid climate makes the work
extremely unpleasant.
Still, in the past five or 10 years researchers have managed to uncover
a number of key sites, including the monument-strewn ruins of Teopantecuanitlan
in the
Mexican state of Guerrero, and the sacred shrine at El Manati, whose
murky springs yielded the first examples of wooden Olmec statuary and the
earliest known
evidence of child sacrifice in Mesoamerica. Heat and hardship notwithstanding,
the prospect of understanding the still shrouded origins of Mesoamerican
civilization--and the haunting beauty of the items on display at the
National Gallery--makes it all seem worthwhile.
--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York and Paul Sherman/Mexico City