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Maya
(Mexico)
Moon Goddess, 600-900
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| The
Island of Jaina off the Campeche coast served as the most
important Maya cemetary yet found. Large numbers of mold-made
statues and whistles have been retrieved. The mold-made front
was often completed with a plain back. Small rattles or whistles
like this hollow rattle figure of an elaborately dressed woman
may have been used for festival events or to announce the
deceased to the Underworld. Scrupulous attention to detail
enhances the realism of these figurines. Similarities in modelling
indicate contact with the Late Classic Nopiloa of Central
Veracruz. |
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Jama-Coaque
(Coastal Ecuador)
Vessel, 400 BCE-500 CE
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| A
great variety of vessels from the Jama-Coaque area of the
northern coast of Ecuador await investigation by scholars.
This relatively early culture created elegant naturalistic
figures with elaborate costumes and ornamentation applied
in layers. The Chone style is characterized by the use of
green and yellow paint on mold-made objects such as whistles,
figures, and rattles. The graceful flaps behind the ears of
the figure on this vessel may refer to bird-men images also
common to the area. Other representations include grotesque
anthropomorphic beings and men and women in feather costumes.
The figural vessels served as tomb guardians amidst other
offerings that accompanied the dead in burial. The mythical
attributes of costume are symbols in a communication system
between humans and deities in life and in death. |
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Chavín
(North-Central Highlands, Peru)
Stirrup-spout Bottle, 1000-200 BCE
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| Peru’s
first expansive civilization is named for its presumed capital,
the city of Chavín de Huántar in the northern
highlands. The Chavín people were contemporaries of
the Olmec of Mesoamerica, and like the Olmec they worshipped
a feline deity. Chavín artisans created cult images
that incorporated elements from the tropical jaguar, combined
with those of serpents, crocodiles, and mythical anthropomorphic
creatures. Chavín pottery is usually monochromatic
black with incised designs and textures that give it a solid
and monumental quality. In this offering vessel with the typical
Andean configuration of stirrup and spout, the body represents
a face consisting of the fanged mouth of the jaguar, the S-shaped
brown markings of the serpent, and the eyes of the falcon.
Chavín composite deities described in elegant curvilinear
designs and a complexity of appendages and concentric outlines
are fundamental concepts of Peruvian artistry that have persisted
for over two thousand years. The art associated with the Chavín
cult spread to the coast of Peru and as far south as the Paracas
Peninsula. |
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Inca
(Cusco/Central Highlands, Peru)
Hair Headdress, 1470-1532
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| The
Inca empire represents the last phase of Andean unity, cultural
and artistic as well as political. As beneficiaries of the
cultures that preceded them, the Inca produced stone monuments,
textiles, ceramics, and metal objects of a distinctive and
original style. From their capital city of Cusco, high in
the Andes, they disseminated their own symbolic vocabulary
throughout their vast domain. According to Spanish chronicles,
the Inca rulers and noble class surrounded themselves with
objects of luxury and splendor, particularly textiles. An
entire class of women, called the Chosen Women, was responsible
for making the clothing of the Inca family and army and for
the production of large quantities of textiles that were used
as offering goods. The headdress consists of a skull cap made
of llama wool with about four pounds of human hair in 160
wrapped braids attached in two tiers. It was the ritual headdress
of a priest, who would wear it during religious ceremonies
to call forth the vital forces of nature symbolized by hair.
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