"All this he saw, for one moment breathless and intense, vivid on the morning sky; and still, as he looked, he lived; and still, as he lived, he wondered."

Pride Month 2025: Art of the Day

Xochipilli, Prince of Flowers: Queer Divinity in Aztec Art

What you’re seeing is a volcanic stone sculpture showing Xochipilli, an Aztec deity part of a group of representing health, pleasure, and happiness, alongside his brothers Ixtlilton (god of health and medicine) and Macuilxóchitl (god of games). Seated in ecstatic trance, his skin and garments adorned with flowers and mushrooms some scholars have suggested to be hallucinogen. This deity has been linked with queer love, artistic creation, and spiritual pleasure, particularly with male homosexuality. Xochiquetzal is his female counterpart.

Before colonial suppression, many Indigenous cultures honored gender variance and same-sex desire through gods, rituals, and artistic expression. Xochipilli’s statue is one of the clearest pre-contact depictions of queer sanctity — a reminder that queerness is not new, Western, or marginal. It is, and has always been, a part of the sacred.

architecture, engineering and construction

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