Mayan Procession Scene, Mayan fresco created by unknown artists about 790 CE in the ancient Mayan city of Bonampak, now in Chiapas state in Mexico. This fresco is part of the paintings that cover the walls of a three-room building on the first floor of a terraced acropolis.
Mayan art and architecture are considered especially sophisticated among the pre-Columbian civilizations. The culture’s beginnings have been traced back to 2000 BCE, and the civilization’s Classic Period is placed between 300 and 900 CE. Bonampak, where this fresco is located, is a Late Classic Period satellite center subordinate to the one at Yaxchilán, some 20 miles (30 km) north. The work is in a three-room building that was discovered in 1946 by Giles Healey, an American archaeologist and explorer. The frescoes were painted by using a dry fresco technique, which means that they were painted onto dry plaster.
The fresco shown here comes from the first room and depicts masked men and musicians accompanying a grand procession. The purpose of the festivities was the presentation of the heir of the ruler of Bonampak, Chaan Muan. There is a baroque quality to this work that is also evident in other Mayan works of art—brilliantly colored murals, polychrome ceramics, and intricately detailed stonework. This is a vibrant and graphically rendered painting—the empty top zone emphasizes the frenzied activity below. Little is known about the Maya and their beliefs, but the paintings at Bonampak establish them as superb masters of artistic techniques that, in some instances, rival those of the European Renaissance.