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Jade in Costa Rica

With Mesoamerica, Costa Rica is one of the two regions in which jade was extensively carved in Precolumbian times.
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Bird Pendant, Jade (jadeite), Guanacaste-Nicoya
Guanacaste-Nicoya
1st century BCE–1st century CE
Figure-Celt Pendant, Jadeite, Guanacaste-Nicoya
Guanacaste-Nicoya
1st–5th century
Bird pendant, Central Region artist(s), Jadeite, Central Region
Central Region artist(s)
300–700 CE
Figure-Celt Pendant, Jadeite, Guanacaste-Nicoya
Guanacaste-Nicoya
1st–5th century
Frog Pendant, Jadeite, Atlantic Watershed
Atlantic Watershed
4th–8th century
Masked Figure Pendant, Jadeite, Atlantic Watershed
Atlantic Watershed
4th–8th century

Costa Rica, a tropical country of environmental and biological diversity, is located between Nicaragua to the north and Panama to the south in lower Central America. With Mesoamerica, Costa Rica is one of the two regions in which jade was extensively carved in Precolumbian times. The earliest evidence for worked jade, a pendant excavated in a burial on the Nicoya Peninsula, is dated to the mid-first millennium B.C., and jade continued to be carved into similar personal ornaments until approximately 700 A.D., when its use appears to have died out and/or been replaced by a fashion for ornaments of gold. The early pendant was made in the shape of a celt, or ax, with a top worked into a bird head and torso. Circular eyes and a wide downturned beak define the head above folded wings, in a basic version of what would be the classic Costa Rican bird pendant in jade. The bird-celt pendant would undergo many elaborations during subsequent centuries, all the while retaining these essential features.


Contributors

Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2001


Further Reading

Jones, Julie, ed. Jade in Ancient Costa Rica. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1999. See on MetPublications


Citation

View Citations

Department of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. “Jade in Costa Rica.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/jade3/hd_jade3.htm (October 2001)