https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serpent_labret_with_articulated_tongue
Episode 5 / 2016
First Look
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Serpent labret with articulated tongue, with tongue extended
Perhaps the finest surviving Aztec gold ornament...
Labrets were manifestations of political power. The Aztec title for royal office was huey tlahtoani, or "great speaker," and the adornment of the mouth was highly symbolic. Crafted from a sacred material, a labret such as this would have underscored the ruler's divinely sanctioned authority and asserted his position as the individual who could speak for the empire. Not surprisingly, therefore, the insertion of a labret was part of a ruler's accession ceremony. Worn on ritual occasions and on the battlefield, this labret, like its wearer a serpent ready to strike its prey, would have been a terrifying sight.
The serpent's head features a powerful jaw with serrated teeth and two prominent fangs, but also more delicate detailing such as the scales on the underside of the lower jaw and a feathered ornament on the head. The bifurcated tongue, ingeniously cast as a moveable piece, could be retracted or swung from side to side, perhaps moving with the wearer's movements. The sinuous form of the serpent's body attaches to a decorated cylinder and flange that would have held the labret in place. Though small, this masterpiece opens a window onto the highest levels of the Aztec empire.
Joanne Pillsbury
Andrall E. Pearson Curator
Department of Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americashttps://www.metmuseum.org/art/online-features/metcollects/labret-serpent-with-articulated-tongue
Serpent Labret with Articulated Tongue
A.D. 1300–1521
Purchase, 2015 Benefit Fund and Lila Acheson Wallace Gift, 2016
2016.64
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