, panel 3, seated king with two subordinates. Second half 8th century. The main Preclassic sculptural style from the Maya area is that of
Izapa, a large site on the Pacific coast where many stelas and (frog-shaped) altars were found showing motifs also present in
Olmec art. The stelas, mostly without inscriptions, often show mythological and narrative subjects, some of which appear to relate to the Twin myth of the
Popol Vuh. However, next to nothing is known about the settlement's former ethnic composition. Artistically, Izapa is closely related to
Kaminaljuyú, a huge and almost completely destroyed site once dominating the Guatemalan Highlands. Among its scattered remains are highlights of Late Preclassic sculpture, such as Monument 10, an altar with an intricate figural relief accompanied by a long inscription. For the Classic Period of the central Maya area, the following major classes of stone sculpture (usually executed in limestone) may be distinguished. •
Stelas. These are large, elongated stone slabs usually covered with carvings and inscriptions, and often accompanied by round altars. Typical of the Classical period, most of them depict the rulers of the cities they were located in, often disguised as gods. Although the rulers' faces, particularly during the later Classic Period, are naturalistic in style, they usually do not show individual traits; but there are notable exceptions to this rule (e.g.,
Piedras Negras, stela 35). The most famous stelas are from
Copan and nearby
Quirigua. These are outstanding for their intricateness of detail, those of Quirigua also for sheer height (stela E measuring over 7 metres above ground level and 3 below). Both the Copan and
Tonina stelas approach sculptures in the round. From
Palenque, otherwise a true Maya capital of the arts, no significant stelae have been preserved. •
Lintels, spanning doorways or jambs. Particularly
Yaxchilan is renowned for its long series of lintels in deep relief, some of the most famous of which show meetings with
ancestors or, perhaps, local deities. •
Panels and tablets, set in the walls and piers of buildings and the sides of platforms. This category is particularly well represented at
Palenque, with the large tablets adorning the inner sanctuaries of the Cross Group temples, and with refined masterworks such as the 'Palace Tablet', the 'Tablet of the Slaves', and the multi-figure panels of the temple XIX and XXI platforms. King
Pakal's carved sarcophagus lidwithout equal in other Maya kingdomsmight also be included here. •
Relief columns flanking doorways in public buildings from the
Puuc region (northwestern Yucatan) and similar in decoration to stelas. •
Altars, rounded or rectangular, sometimes resting on three or four boulder-like legs. They may be wholly or partly figurative (e.g., Copan turtle altar) or have a relief image on top, sometimes consisting of a single
Ahau day sign (Caracol, Tonina). •
Zoomorphs, or large boulders sculpted to resemble supernatural creatures and covered with highly complicated figurative relief ornamentation. These seem to be restricted to the kingdom of
Quirigua during the Late Classic period. •
Ball court markers, or relief roundels placed in the central axis of the floors of ball courts (such as those of Copan,
Chinkultic, Tonina), and usually showing royal ball game scenes. •
Monumental stairs, most famously the giant hieroglyphic stairway of Copan. The hewn stone blocks of hieroglyphic stairways together constitute an extensive text. Stairways can also be decorated with a great variety of scenes (
La Corona), particularly the ball game. Sometimes, the ball game becomes the stairs' chief theme (
Yaxchilan), with a captive depicted inside the ball, or, elsewhere (
Tonina), a full-figure captive stretched out along the step. •
Thrones and benches, the thrones with a broad, square seat, and a back sometimes iconically shaped like the wall of a cave and worked open to show human figures. Benches, covered with relief on the front, tend to be incorporated into the surrounding architecture; they are more elongated, and lack a back support. Examples from Palenque and Copan have supports showing cosmological carriers (
Bacabs,
Chaaks). •
Stone sculpture in the round is especially known from Copan and Toniná. It is represented by statuary, such as a seated Copan scribe as well as captive figures and small stelas from Toniná; by certain figurative architectural elements, such as the twenty maize deities from the façade of Copan Temple 22; and by giant sculptures such as the symmetrically-positioned jaguars and simian musicians of Copán, that were integral parts of architectural design. File:Yaxchilan Lintel 24.jpg|
Yaxchilan lintel 24, king holding torch and queen letting blood, 723–726 CE (
British Museum) File:Maya Presentation of Captives Kimbell.jpg|Yaxchilan lintel, war chief presenting captives to the king, 783 CE (
Kimbell Art Museum) File:Column, Costumed Figure MET DP250922-Gallery358.jpg|Relief column, Late Classic (
Metropolitan Museum of Art) File:Piedrasnegrastrono.jpg|Piedras Negras throne 1, with heads restored, Late Classic (Museo Nacional de Antropología e Historia de Guatemala) File:Itzamna e Ixchel.JPG|Back of throne, Late Classic (
Museo Amparo) File:Guide leaflet (1901) (14582030937).jpg|One of twenty maize god sculptures from Copan temple 22, Late Classic (
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology) File:Monument 151 de Tonina, prisonnier, exposition "Mayas", Musée du Quai Branly, Paris.jpg|
Tonina monument 151, bound prisoner, Classic File:Pierre-champignon - Maya Préclassique.jpg|Mushroom stone, sculpted volcanic stone, Guatemala,
Musée du Quai Branly ==Wood carving==