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photo of the ceramic leaf-nosed bat head bottle with single spout, side profile facing left

photo of the ceramic leaf-nosed bat head bottle with single spout, side profile facing left

photo of the ceramic leaf-nosed bat head bottle with single spout, quarter turn profile

photo of the ceramic leaf-nosed bat head bottle with single spout, quarter turn profile

photo of the ceramic leaf-nosed bat head bottle with single spout, back view

photo of the ceramic leaf-nosed bat head bottle with single spout, back view

photo of gallery label:
“Cupisnique artist; Tembladera,
North Coast, Peru
Bottle with leaf-nosed bat head
1200-800 BCE
Ceramic, cinnabar
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection,
Purchase, Nelson A. Rockefeller Gift, 1968 (1978.412.210)
Recorded provenance: Alan Lapiner, Arts of the Four Quarters Ltd., New York, by 1968; the MPA, New York,
1968-78
Potters occasionally applied red pigments to vessels after firing to create a more dramatic visual effect. Iron-based ochres were common, but sometimes potters used cinnabar, a mercury-rich mineral, to create bright reds. Cinnabar was imported to the North Coast from Huancavelica, a highland region some five hundred miles south of where these vessels were allegedly found.”

photo of gallery label: “Cupisnique artist; Tembladera, North Coast, Peru Bottle with leaf-nosed bat head 1200-800 BCE Ceramic, cinnabar The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Purchase, Nelson A. Rockefeller Gift, 1968 (1978.412.210) Recorded provenance: Alan Lapiner, Arts of the Four Quarters Ltd., New York, by 1968; the MPA, New York, 1968-78 Potters occasionally applied red pigments to vessels after firing to create a more dramatic visual effect. Iron-based ochres were common, but sometimes potters used cinnabar, a mercury-rich mineral, to create bright reds. Cinnabar was imported to the North Coast from Huancavelica, a highland region some five hundred miles south of where these vessels were allegedly found.”

#Baturday 🦇:
Cupisnique artist; Tembladera,
North Coast, Peru
Bottle with leaf-nosed #bat head
1200-800 BCE
Ceramic, cinnabar
on display at The Met (1978.412.210)
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #AncientArt

22 6 0 0
“This impressive gilded copper disk depicts a crab, surrounded by alternating plain and embossed circular gold bands. The ornament was originally cut from a larger sheet of hammered copper and was subsequently gilded. Portions of the sheet were removed to create the central figure plus five concentric rings connected by six radiating bands or rays. The first, third and outermost circular bands are unworked, while the second and fourth bands have been embossed to depict six fish in profile. The central repoussé crab is masterfully represented with embossed eye stalks, mouth parts, pinchers, carapace, walking legs and tail. Even the articulation points of the leg joints are indicated. As with the crab, each fish in the inner band has been delicately embossed to indicate the piscine facial anatomy, scales and fins. The fourth circular band depicts spotted catfish illustrated in a dorsal view depicting eyes, fins and scales. The plain surfaces, including the rays and the three plain circular bands, are adorned with gilded dangles affixed to the disk by thin gilded wires attached to the back. The wires that hold the dangles are oriented so that only when the central figure, the crab, is pointing up, do the dangles hang properly. (In any other orientation, some of the disks would hang beyond the borders of the backing.) One can imagine the brilliant effect of sunlight reflecting off the solid and shimmering elements of this object.”

“This impressive gilded copper disk depicts a crab, surrounded by alternating plain and embossed circular gold bands. The ornament was originally cut from a larger sheet of hammered copper and was subsequently gilded. Portions of the sheet were removed to create the central figure plus five concentric rings connected by six radiating bands or rays. The first, third and outermost circular bands are unworked, while the second and fourth bands have been embossed to depict six fish in profile. The central repoussé crab is masterfully represented with embossed eye stalks, mouth parts, pinchers, carapace, walking legs and tail. Even the articulation points of the leg joints are indicated. As with the crab, each fish in the inner band has been delicately embossed to indicate the piscine facial anatomy, scales and fins. The fourth circular band depicts spotted catfish illustrated in a dorsal view depicting eyes, fins and scales. The plain surfaces, including the rays and the three plain circular bands, are adorned with gilded dangles affixed to the disk by thin gilded wires attached to the back. The wires that hold the dangles are oriented so that only when the central figure, the crab, is pointing up, do the dangles hang properly. (In any other orientation, some of the disks would hang beyond the borders of the backing.) One can imagine the brilliant effect of sunlight reflecting off the solid and shimmering elements of this object.”

“In Moche iconography, crabs are one of the major animals featured in the pantheon of anthropomorphic warriors. Combatants with crab-like bodies and other crustacean attributes but with human heads are often found on Moche modeled and painted ceramics (see, for example, a ceramic bottle in the Met’s collection, 67.167.5). It is unclear what features elevated this sea creature to one of esteem: Was it the crab’s ability to live both under the water and along the edge of the sea seen as symbolic of a warrior’s ability to transcend realms? Or were the crab’s powerful pinchers seen as metaphors of military might? Or was it some other trait unclear to us but evident to Moche viewers? As there was no tradition of writing in the prehispanic Andes, the specific meanings of such imagery remain elusive.

The technical sophistication required for the creation of objects such as this once led scholars to refer to this period as the Master Craftsmen Era (Bennett and Bird, 1949; Castillo 2017). The technology employed for producing these ornate metal objects, however, is still the subject of study (Lechtman, 1982; Schorsch, 1998).

The function of disks such the present example is unclear. They may have served as shield frontals, attached to a cane backing, but the delicate nature of the design would have limited its protective function in actual battle. Thus, these objects may have been intended for ritual use as symbolic weapon adornments. Alternatively, they may have been attached to textile banners or hangings.”

“In Moche iconography, crabs are one of the major animals featured in the pantheon of anthropomorphic warriors. Combatants with crab-like bodies and other crustacean attributes but with human heads are often found on Moche modeled and painted ceramics (see, for example, a ceramic bottle in the Met’s collection, 67.167.5). It is unclear what features elevated this sea creature to one of esteem: Was it the crab’s ability to live both under the water and along the edge of the sea seen as symbolic of a warrior’s ability to transcend realms? Or were the crab’s powerful pinchers seen as metaphors of military might? Or was it some other trait unclear to us but evident to Moche viewers? As there was no tradition of writing in the prehispanic Andes, the specific meanings of such imagery remain elusive. The technical sophistication required for the creation of objects such as this once led scholars to refer to this period as the Master Craftsmen Era (Bennett and Bird, 1949; Castillo 2017). The technology employed for producing these ornate metal objects, however, is still the subject of study (Lechtman, 1982; Schorsch, 1998). The function of disks such the present example is unclear. They may have served as shield frontals, attached to a cane backing, but the delicate nature of the design would have limited its protective function in actual battle. Thus, these objects may have been intended for ritual use as symbolic weapon adornments. Alternatively, they may have been attached to textile banners or hangings.”

#MetalMonday :
Moche artists; North Coast, Peru
Shield with #crab and #fish figures, 500–800 CE
Gilded copper
H. 7 1/4 × W. 7 1/4 × D. 3/4 in. (18.4 × 18.4 × 1.9 cm)
on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1987.394.46)
#AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt

17 0 0 1
photo of the fox bottle on display at museum, quarter turn side profile 
bichrome brown and tan, with molded and incised details, spout and bridge top connected to head on globular body

photo of the fox bottle on display at museum, quarter turn side profile bichrome brown and tan, with molded and incised details, spout and bridge top connected to head on globular body

photo of the fox bottle on display at museum, front profile 
bichrome brown and tan, with molded and incised details, spout and bridge top connected to head on globular body

photo of the fox bottle on display at museum, front profile bichrome brown and tan, with molded and incised details, spout and bridge top connected to head on globular body

#FoxFriday 🦊 at the Ancient Americas wing of the Met:
Topará artist(s); South Coast, Peru Spout-and-bridge bottle with #fox 200 BCE-100 CE
Ceramic, slip
63.232.49
#AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt

63 21 0 5
photo of the fox head bottle on display at museum, quarter turn profile view
Bichrome brown and tan, with molded and painted details, stirrup spout

photo of the fox head bottle on display at museum, quarter turn profile view Bichrome brown and tan, with molded and painted details, stirrup spout

photo of the fox head bottle on display at museum, front profile view
Bichrome brown and tan, with molded and painted details, stirrup spout

photo of the fox head bottle on display at museum, front profile view Bichrome brown and tan, with molded and painted details, stirrup spout

#FoxFriday 🦊 at the Ancient Americas wing of the Met:
Moche artist(s); North Coast, Peru
Bottle with #fox head, 500-800 CE
Ceramic, slip
63.226.6
#AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt

64 23 0 1
photo of the “Stirrup-spout bottle with fox head and clubs” on display at museum, front profile

photo of the “Stirrup-spout bottle with fox head and clubs” on display at museum, front profile

photo of the “Stirrup-spout bottle with fox head and clubs” on display at museum, side profile

photo of the “Stirrup-spout bottle with fox head and clubs” on display at museum, side profile

photo of gallery sign:
“Moche artists); North Coast, Peru Stirrup-spout bottle with fox head and clubs 500-800 CE
Ceramic, slip
Gift of Judith Riklis, 1983(1983.546.4)
Recorded provenance: Judith Riklis, New York, by 1983
The top of this vessel was modeled in the shape of a war club with the head of a fox and tiny human arms. War clubs and other elements likely taken as trophies from a defeated enemy were painted on the side of the vessel. The fox's helmet strap holds down a vine of chili peppers, perhaps underscoring an association between the spice's heat and the pain caused by the club.”

photo of gallery sign: “Moche artists); North Coast, Peru Stirrup-spout bottle with fox head and clubs 500-800 CE Ceramic, slip Gift of Judith Riklis, 1983(1983.546.4) Recorded provenance: Judith Riklis, New York, by 1983 The top of this vessel was modeled in the shape of a war club with the head of a fox and tiny human arms. War clubs and other elements likely taken as trophies from a defeated enemy were painted on the side of the vessel. The fox's helmet strap holds down a vine of chili peppers, perhaps underscoring an association between the spice's heat and the pain caused by the club.”

#FoxFriday 🦊 at the Ancient Americas wing of the Met:
Moche artist(s); North Coast, Peru Stirrup-spout bottle with #fox head and clubs, 500-800 CE
Ceramic, slip
1983.546.4
#AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt

31 13 2 1
photo of the beaker pair on display side by side at museum
gold cups with a row of human faces circling the top and a row of frogs circling the bottom

photo of the beaker pair on display side by side at museum gold cups with a row of human faces circling the top and a row of frogs circling the bottom

Closeup of the faces and frogs on one of the beakers

Closeup of the faces and frogs on one of the beakers

closeup of one of the frog details

closeup of one of the frog details

#FrogFriday in the Ancient Americas wing at the Met 🐸: (3/3…no wait 3/4!)
Lambayeque (Sicán) artist(s);
North Coast, Peru
Beakers with faces and #frogs
900-1100 CE
Gold
#AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt

3 2 0 0
photo of the frog effigy vessel on display at museum
Red & tan, molded & incised details, stirrup spout

photo of the frog effigy vessel on display at museum Red & tan, molded & incised details, stirrup spout

photo of gallery sign:
“Moche artists); North Coast, Peru Stirrup-spout bottle with toad 200-500 CE
Ceramic, slip
Gift of Conny and Fred Landmann, 1992 (1992.60.8)
Recorded provenance: Conny and Frederick E. Landmann, New Hampshire, by 1992
Moche artists were close observers of the natural world, and their early ceramics often depicted animals with considerable fidelity.
Made before molds were commonly used, these effigies demonstrate an expansion of the sculptural possibilities of clay vessels.
Some vessels captured salient features of animals two-dimensionally; in later centuries, slip painting would become the favored means to convey ideas.”

photo of gallery sign: “Moche artists); North Coast, Peru Stirrup-spout bottle with toad 200-500 CE Ceramic, slip Gift of Conny and Fred Landmann, 1992 (1992.60.8) Recorded provenance: Conny and Frederick E. Landmann, New Hampshire, by 1992 Moche artists were close observers of the natural world, and their early ceramics often depicted animals with considerable fidelity. Made before molds were commonly used, these effigies demonstrate an expansion of the sculptural possibilities of clay vessels. Some vessels captured salient features of animals two-dimensionally; in later centuries, slip painting would become the favored means to convey ideas.”

#FrogFriday in the Ancient Americas wing at the Met 🐸: (1/3)
Moche artist(s); North Coast, Peru Stirrup-spout bottle with #toad 200-500 CE
Ceramic, slip
1992.60.8
#AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt

45 21 4 0
official museum photo of the textile band fragment on grey background 
“Peruvian textiles frequently contain repeated imagery with alternating colors and inversions. These carefully devised patterns were highly symbolic, representing the organization of varied designs into a harmonious whole. The imagery on this textile could also evoke relationships between forms, particularly those in the natural world. Undulating tadpoles on the Nasca band invoke their eventual transformation into amphibians.”

official museum photo of the textile band fragment on grey background “Peruvian textiles frequently contain repeated imagery with alternating colors and inversions. These carefully devised patterns were highly symbolic, representing the organization of varied designs into a harmonious whole. The imagery on this textile could also evoke relationships between forms, particularly those in the natural world. Undulating tadpoles on the Nasca band invoke their eventual transformation into amphibians.”

Fragment of a Band (with #tadpole design!)
Nazca culture, Peru (South Coast),
Early Intermediate period, c.400–700 CE
Camelid fiber & cotton
56 1/4 x 1 3/8 in. (142.8 x 3.5 cm)
Saint Louis Art Museum 185:1944 www.slam.org/collection/o...
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt
#Frogs

25 5 0 0
official auction photo of the silver ornament, circular disc with hammered design of a frog, mounted and shown next to a penny for scale

“A very large, hammered silver head ornament of a circular, medallion-like form, adorned by an amphibian - frog or toad - in repousse with outspread legs, bumpy skin, and an expressive happy visage presenting round bulging eyes, pierced nostrils, and a wide smile. In addition to the piece's impressive artistry, it is a richly symbolic piece, as the frog (rana) was associated with rain, water, the sustenance that it brings, spring, fertility, and rebirth in the Pre-Columbian world.

Silver working is a two thousand year old tradition in Peru. To the ancients of Peru, precious metals indicated special status. Both silver and gold were symbols of power and prestige worn exclusively by the elite. They signified high social status and respected political authority during life as well as after death when placed as votive offerings in tombs with the honored deceased. Silver was used to create numerous types of objects, ranging from personal ornaments like this example to effigy vessels shaped in the likenesses of human figures, animals, and birds.”

official auction photo of the silver ornament, circular disc with hammered design of a frog, mounted and shown next to a penny for scale “A very large, hammered silver head ornament of a circular, medallion-like form, adorned by an amphibian - frog or toad - in repousse with outspread legs, bumpy skin, and an expressive happy visage presenting round bulging eyes, pierced nostrils, and a wide smile. In addition to the piece's impressive artistry, it is a richly symbolic piece, as the frog (rana) was associated with rain, water, the sustenance that it brings, spring, fertility, and rebirth in the Pre-Columbian world. Silver working is a two thousand year old tradition in Peru. To the ancients of Peru, precious metals indicated special status. Both silver and gold were symbols of power and prestige worn exclusively by the elite. They signified high social status and respected political authority during life as well as after death when placed as votive offerings in tombs with the honored deceased. Silver was used to create numerous types of objects, ranging from personal ornaments like this example to effigy vessels shaped in the likenesses of human figures, animals, and birds.”

#FrogFriday 🐸:
Silver #Frog Ornament
Sican / Lambayeque, Northern Peru, c. 800-1100 CE
5.125" W x 5.375" H (13 cm x 13.7 cm)
Artemis Gallery via www.bidsquare.com/online-aucti...
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt

29 1 0 0
Official auction photo 1, side profile facing right
“An outstanding bi-chrome red-on-cream frog effigy vessel with bas relief corn stalks on either side of the body and another adorning the throat, all surrounded by painted beans. The vessel presents a sizeable bull frog - with legs tucked against his body and an arched stirrup spout emerging from his back. The protruding head boasts bulging eyes and a pronounced nose adorned with striations above an open mouth full of teeth. A wonderful vessel demonstrating superior command of technique and medium as well as embodying meaningful symbolism; in the Pre-Columbian world, the frog (rana) was associated with rain, the sustenance that it brings about, and fertility.”

Official auction photo 1, side profile facing right “An outstanding bi-chrome red-on-cream frog effigy vessel with bas relief corn stalks on either side of the body and another adorning the throat, all surrounded by painted beans. The vessel presents a sizeable bull frog - with legs tucked against his body and an arched stirrup spout emerging from his back. The protruding head boasts bulging eyes and a pronounced nose adorned with striations above an open mouth full of teeth. A wonderful vessel demonstrating superior command of technique and medium as well as embodying meaningful symbolism; in the Pre-Columbian world, the frog (rana) was associated with rain, the sustenance that it brings about, and fertility.”

Official auction photo 2, side profile facing left

Official auction photo 2, side profile facing left

Official auction photo 3, back view

Official auction photo 3, back view

Official auction photo 1, bottom view

Official auction photo 1, bottom view

#FrogFriday 🐸:
#Frog Stirrup Vessel (with bas relief corn stalks & painted beans!)
Moche culture, North Coast Peru, c.400 CE
Bi-chrome pottery, 8.25" L x 5.5" W x 8.5" H (21 x 14 x 21.6 cm)
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt
www.liveauctioneers.com/item/8089696...

45 15 0 1
"This bimetallic nose ornament, crafted from gold and silver, features two distinct sections due to the symmetry employed in its manufacture. One section, made of silver, displays two zoomorphic designs (prawns) positioned dorsally, facing each other, towards the middle and inner part of the object. The design surrounding these zoomorphic elements, crafted from gold, depicts a two-headed zoomorphic creature with a row of 17 sequins hanging along its body, attached mechanically. The object was created using repoussé and openwork techniques. Malacological elements are inlaid in the eye areas of these creatures. The piece has a polished finish."

"This bimetallic nose ornament, crafted from gold and silver, features two distinct sections due to the symmetry employed in its manufacture. One section, made of silver, displays two zoomorphic designs (prawns) positioned dorsally, facing each other, towards the middle and inner part of the object. The design surrounding these zoomorphic elements, crafted from gold, depicts a two-headed zoomorphic creature with a row of 17 sequins hanging along its body, attached mechanically. The object was created using repoussé and openwork techniques. Malacological elements are inlaid in the eye areas of these creatures. The piece has a polished finish."

"A bimetallic nose ornament crafted from gold and silver, composed of two distinct sections. The silver section features two zoomorphic designs on either side, depicting crustaceans (prawns) in profile and facing opposite directions. The central section, made of gold, displays another zoomorphic motif: a crustacean (crab) shown from above. The piece includes a hook or clasp, also made entirely of gold. The designs were created using repoussé and openwork techniques and feature semiprecious stones inlaid in the eye area. The object has a polished surface finish."

"A bimetallic nose ornament crafted from gold and silver, composed of two distinct sections. The silver section features two zoomorphic designs on either side, depicting crustaceans (prawns) in profile and facing opposite directions. The central section, made of gold, displays another zoomorphic motif: a crustacean (crab) shown from above. The piece includes a hook or clasp, also made entirely of gold. The designs were created using repoussé and openwork techniques and feature semiprecious stones inlaid in the eye area. The object has a polished surface finish."

#TwoForTuesday:
Noserings (w/ #crustaceans)
Mochica (Moche) culture, Peru, Early Intermediate (200-600 CE) / Origin: Huaca Cao Viejo
Bimetallic gold & silver w/ inlaid shell & stone eyes
El Brujo Archaeological Complex EBBME00000-13,20
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt
www.elbrujo.pe/catalogo/?pa...

27 12 0 2
"A bimetallic nose ornament crafted from gold and silver, composed of two symmetrical sections. In one of the side sections, the hook or clasp is made of gold, while the zoomorphic motif below it is made of silver. In the opposite section, the composition is reversed: the clasp is silver and the lower design is gold. The decoration depicts arachnid figures (scorpions) arranged in pairs, with their bodies facing the central axis of the object. The motifs were executed using repoussé and openwork techniques. The piece has a polished surface finish."

"A bimetallic nose ornament crafted from gold and silver, composed of two symmetrical sections. In one of the side sections, the hook or clasp is made of gold, while the zoomorphic motif below it is made of silver. In the opposite section, the composition is reversed: the clasp is silver and the lower design is gold. The decoration depicts arachnid figures (scorpions) arranged in pairs, with their bodies facing the central axis of the object. The motifs were executed using repoussé and openwork techniques. The piece has a polished surface finish."

#MetalMonday :
Nose ring with #scorpions
Mochica (Moche) culture, Early Intermediate Period (200-600 CE)
Origin: Huaca Cao Viejo (Upper Platform, NW Courtyard)
Bimetallic gold & silver
El Brujo Archaeological Complex EBBME00000-22 www.elbrujo.pe/catalogo/?pa...
#IndigenousArt #PeruvianArt #AndeanArt

40 10 0 1

Image credit:
St. Michael Archangel, Attributed to Basilio de Santa Cruz Pumacallao, c. 1661–1700
Museo de América

#MuseoDeAmérica #CuzcoPainting #ViceregalArt #ColonialArt #AndeanArt #LatinAmericanArt #ArtHistory #MuseumExhibition #CulturalHeritage
(4/4)

0 0 0 0
official auction photo of the three turtle effigy vessels posed in a row in quarter turn profiles on gradient grey background
all nearly identical: redware ceramic, single wide spout on top of shell, head and four legs/feet, incised details of eyes and mouth, and serrated edging on shell

official auction photo of the three turtle effigy vessels posed in a row in quarter turn profiles on gradient grey background all nearly identical: redware ceramic, single wide spout on top of shell, head and four legs/feet, incised details of eyes and mouth, and serrated edging on shell

#TurtleTuesday 🐢:
Set of Three #Turtle Effigy Vessels
Calima culture, Colombia, 100 BCE - 500 CE
Ceramic with brown-orange slip, calcareous deposit, manganese oxides
H. 9 to 10 cm - L. 14 cm (H. 3 ½ to 4 in - L. 5 ½ in)
www.giquelloetassocies.fr/en/lot/11418...
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

38 10 0 0
Video

New releases on @pixtury.
Choose the format, choose the material and order your painting or print it on paper.

www.pixtury.com/photos/geama...

#art #painting #illustration #artforsale #andes #wildlife #andeanart #polarart #natureart #animalart #blueskyart #artcommunity #fineart #contemporaryart

1 0 0 0
official auction photo of the object on black background, view 1 quarter turn side profile right
Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 1 quarter turn side profile right Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 2 quarter turn side profile left
Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 2 quarter turn side profile left Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 3 full side profile right
Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 3 full side profile right Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 4 back profile
Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

official auction photo of the object on black background, view 4 back profile Chimu blackware pottery, single spout stirrup vessel, crab effigy, molded & incised details

Merry #Crustmas to all who shellebrate 🦀
#Crab Effigy Vessel
Chimu culture, Peru, c.900-1470 CE
Blackware ceramic, H 6 5/8 in. (16.83 cm)
freemansauction.com/auctions/206...
#IndigenousArt #PeruvianArt #AndeanArt #CrabTime

52 14 0 2
official auction photos on black background of a Moche polychrome stirrup effigy vessel in the form of a sea lion head with fish in its mouth, painted and incised details 
view 1, quarter turn side profile showing head end of fish in mouth

official auction photos on black background of a Moche polychrome stirrup effigy vessel in the form of a sea lion head with fish in its mouth, painted and incised details view 1, quarter turn side profile showing head end of fish in mouth

view 2, quarter turn side profile in opposite direction showing tail end of fish in mouth

view 2, quarter turn side profile in opposite direction showing tail end of fish in mouth

view 3, full side profile showing external ear (identifying it as a sea lion)

view 3, full side profile showing external ear (identifying it as a sea lion)

#SeaLion Effigy Vessel
Moche culture, Peru, c.200-800 CE
Polychrome ceramic, H 10 3/8 in. (26.35 cm)
freemansauction.com/auctions/206...
#IndigenoisArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt

15 6 0 0
Post image Post image Post image Post image

New releases on @pixtury.
Choose the format, choose the material and order your painting or print it on paper.

www.pixtury.com/photos/geama...

#artforsale #andes #wildlife #andeanart #natureart #animalart #blueskyart #artcommunity #fineart #contemporaryart #supportsmallartists #bolivia #chile

1 0 0 0
Post image

Andean region wildlife art: original painting now on @pixtury
Customize and print on fine art paper or canvas.

www.pixtury.com/photos/geama...

#art #painting #artist #illustration #artforsale #andes #wildlife #andeanart #polarart #natureart #animalart #blueskyart #artcommunity #southamerica #peru

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Video

Andean region wildlife art: original painting now on @pixtury
Customize and print on fine art paper or canvas.

www.pixtury.com/photos/geama...

#artforsale #andes #wildlife #andeanart #natureart #animalart #blueskyart #artcommunity #fineart #contemporaryart #supportsmallartists #bolivia #chile

1 0 0 0
photo of the pottery piece on display at museum
double chambered & single spouted (upside down Y shape) vessel; left half as a light brown strombus shell with spout half red-brown and right half as a dark brown spondylus shell with spout half light brown; molded and incised details

photo of the pottery piece on display at museum double chambered & single spouted (upside down Y shape) vessel; left half as a light brown strombus shell with spout half red-brown and right half as a dark brown spondylus shell with spout half light brown; molded and incised details

photo of the gallery label:

“Unidentified Moche
Artist
Double Chambered Bottle
Representing a Spondylus Shell and Strombus Shell lst-7th century
North coast, Peru Earthenware, slip
Gift of the Austen-Stokes Ancient Americas
Foundation, Upper Nyack, New York, BMA 2005.31”

photo of the gallery label: “Unidentified Moche Artist Double Chambered Bottle Representing a Spondylus Shell and Strombus Shell lst-7th century North coast, Peru Earthenware, slip Gift of the Austen-Stokes Ancient Americas Foundation, Upper Nyack, New York, BMA 2005.31”

#TwoForTuesday :
Double Chambered Bottle
Representing a Spondylus #Shell and Strombus Shell
Moche culture, North coast Peru, 1st-7th c.
Earthenware, slip
On display at Baltimore Museum of Art (2005.31)
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #Mollusks

15 3 0 0
official museum photo of the frog jug, quarter turn side profile on grey background
Frog effigy vessel: single spout top; molded, incised, and painted details; tan and red-brown (tan legs and mouth, tan eyes with red pupils, body red/brown with tan polka dots)

official museum photo of the frog jug, quarter turn side profile on grey background Frog effigy vessel: single spout top; molded, incised, and painted details; tan and red-brown (tan legs and mouth, tan eyes with red pupils, body red/brown with tan polka dots)

official museum photo of the frog jug, full side profile view on grey background

official museum photo of the frog jug, full side profile view on grey background

#FrogFriday 🐸:
#Frog Pitcher, 1st - 8th c. CE
Moche culture, North Coast Peru
(Chicama Valley, Toma del Tesoro / Sausal)
Ceramic, H 239 x L 158 x W 220 mm; 1918 g
Museo Larco ML009350 coleccion.museolarco.org/detail/10218
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

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Official museum photo of pottery piece, front/side profile on grey background
Moche effigy vessel in the form of a peanut with a bird’s head, with single spout stirrup handle

Official museum photo of pottery piece, front/side profile on grey background Moche effigy vessel in the form of a peanut with a bird’s head, with single spout stirrup handle

PEANUT BIRD! 🥜🐤
Moche culture, North Coast Peru
c. 1-800 CE or 200 BCE - 600 CE
Ceramic, H 205 x L 117 x W 222 mm; 581 g
Museo Larco ML007306 coleccion.museolarco.org/detail/7306
#BirdsInArt #IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

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official museum photo of the pair of gold beakers, side by side in front profile on gradient grey background

official museum photo of the pair of gold beakers, side by side in front profile on gradient grey background

#TwoForTuesday :
Pair of Beakers Depicting #Birds in a Cornfield
Inca, Ica Valley, South Coast, Peru, c. 1100–1438
Gold, 7 × 7.3 cm (2 3/4 × 2 7/8 in.) ea.
Art Institute of Chicago 1955.2589a-b www.artic.edu/artworks/191...
#BirdsInArt #IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

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“Sea Lion Effigy Stirrup Spout Vessel
Unidentified artists), Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE
Earthenware
Anonymous gift, 2009, acc. по. 48.2842”
photo of sea lion effigy vessel (blackware ceramic)  #1 and its gallery label on display at The Walters

“Sea Lion Effigy Stirrup Spout Vessel Unidentified artists), Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE Earthenware Anonymous gift, 2009, acc. по. 48.2842” photo of sea lion effigy vessel (blackware ceramic) #1 and its gallery label on display at The Walters

“Black ceramic bottle modeled in the form of a sea lion. Moche style, Peru. This sea animal was hunted for its meat and tough hide.
41.27248 Gift of Conny and Fred Landmann”
photo of sea lion effigy vessel (blackware ceramic)  #2 and its gallery label on display at AMNH

“Black ceramic bottle modeled in the form of a sea lion. Moche style, Peru. This sea animal was hunted for its meat and tough hide. 41.27248 Gift of Conny and Fred Landmann” photo of sea lion effigy vessel (blackware ceramic) #2 and its gallery label on display at AMNH

#WorldSeaLionDay double play:
1. “Sea Lion Effigy Stirrup Spout Vessel
Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE
Earthenware”
Walters Art Museum 48.2842
2. “Black ceramic bottle modeled in the form of a sea lion. Moche style, Peru.”
AMNH 41.27248
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

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photo of Moche feline with snake blackware effigy vessel #1 at The Walters 
label at museum: “Feline Effigy Stirrup-Spout Vessel
Unidentified artists), Moche culture,
Peru, 500-800 CE
Earthenware
Anonymous gift, 2009, acc. no. 48.2843”

photo of Moche feline with snake blackware effigy vessel #1 at The Walters label at museum: “Feline Effigy Stirrup-Spout Vessel Unidentified artists), Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE Earthenware Anonymous gift, 2009, acc. no. 48.2843”

photo of Moche feline with snake blackware effigy vessel #2 at AMNH
label at museum:
“Ceramic bottle molded and incised to depict a feline grasping a snake. Moche style, Peru.
41.2/8017 Gift of Conny and Fred Landmann”

photo of Moche feline with snake blackware effigy vessel #2 at AMNH label at museum: “Ceramic bottle molded and incised to depict a feline grasping a snake. Moche style, Peru. 41.2/8017 Gift of Conny and Fred Landmann”

#TwoForTuesday from recent museum visits:
1. “Feline Effigy Stirrup-Spout Vessel, Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE.” Spotted at The Walters (48.2843)
2. “Ceramic bottle molded & incised to depict a #feline grasping a #snake. Moche style, Peru.” Spotted at AMNH (41.2/8017)
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

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photo of the llama effigy vessel and its gallery label on display at museum

“During the Late Intermediate Period, the Chancay Valley and adjacent Chillón Drainage developed an energetic corporate style of architecture and art. Large amounts of ceramics were produced and distributed among the ruling elite as well as those of lesser status. Among these are the distinctive mold-made and hand-modeled sculptures of humans (both men and women) and animals. This engaging sculpture of a young llama captures the animal's natural inquisitiveness. It cocks its head slightly to the side as if watching intently some unseen activity. The artist divided the llama's face into two halves, painting one side white and the other black, following the Andean principle of duality and balance. The artist also designated the animal's sex as male, and embellished the body with black spots, one of the natural coloration schemes of the animal. Typical of the distinctive Chancay pottery style is the somewhat haphazard modeling and painting, which enhance the piece's charm.” https://art.thewalters.org/object/2009.20.49/

photo of the llama effigy vessel and its gallery label on display at museum “During the Late Intermediate Period, the Chancay Valley and adjacent Chillón Drainage developed an energetic corporate style of architecture and art. Large amounts of ceramics were produced and distributed among the ruling elite as well as those of lesser status. Among these are the distinctive mold-made and hand-modeled sculptures of humans (both men and women) and animals. This engaging sculpture of a young llama captures the animal's natural inquisitiveness. It cocks its head slightly to the side as if watching intently some unseen activity. The artist divided the llama's face into two halves, painting one side white and the other black, following the Andean principle of duality and balance. The artist also designated the animal's sex as male, and embellished the body with black spots, one of the natural coloration schemes of the animal. Typical of the distinctive Chancay pottery style is the somewhat haphazard modeling and painting, which enhance the piece's charm.” https://art.thewalters.org/object/2009.20.49/

 Closeup front view of head showing split black-white coloration 

“The llama, a native camelid of the Americas, touched all aspects of Andean life. The llama-the only native American beast of burden-was used primarily to transport goods from coastal deserts to the highest mountain plains. Well adapted to the extremes of the Andean environment, including climate, terrain, & altitude, the llama was at the heart of every Andean home. The llama & its camelid cousins (alpaca, guanaco, & vicuña) provided the all-important hairs that were spun into fibers to weave warm garments of considerable strength & durability. Such clothing was crucial for survival during cold Andean nights & in altiplano highlands. Llamas also provided body heat for shepherds & other laborers who couldn’t return to a warm home every night. Llama blood was an important ritual offering, & its meat was occasionally consumed for protein, although the high value of the living animal made these latter uses infrequent & of special significance.”
https://art.thewalters.org/object/2009.20.49/

Closeup front view of head showing split black-white coloration “The llama, a native camelid of the Americas, touched all aspects of Andean life. The llama-the only native American beast of burden-was used primarily to transport goods from coastal deserts to the highest mountain plains. Well adapted to the extremes of the Andean environment, including climate, terrain, & altitude, the llama was at the heart of every Andean home. The llama & its camelid cousins (alpaca, guanaco, & vicuña) provided the all-important hairs that were spun into fibers to weave warm garments of considerable strength & durability. Such clothing was crucial for survival during cold Andean nights & in altiplano highlands. Llamas also provided body heat for shepherds & other laborers who couldn’t return to a warm home every night. Llama blood was an important ritual offering, & its meat was occasionally consumed for protein, although the high value of the living animal made these latter uses infrequent & of special significance.” https://art.thewalters.org/object/2009.20.49/

Photo sticker from the Walters Art Museum gift shop featuring Paco!

Photo sticker from the Walters Art Museum gift shop featuring Paco!

#MammalMonday: it’s Paco! (of course I had to get the gift shop sticker too 😎)
#Llama Effigy Vessel
Chancay culture, Peru, 1000-1470
Earthenware, slip paint
21.11 x 40.39 x 16 cm
Now on display at The Walters’ newly opened Latin American Art / Arte Latinoamericano galleries
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt

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photo of the object on display at museum
(48.2826)
H 6 3/16 x W 7 x D 4 3/16 in. (15.75 x 17.78 x 10.67 cm)
“The Peruvian Pelican, one of the largest seabirds of the region, is shown in a life-like manner on the top of the vessel. By contrast, the base is covered with abstract spiraling motifs that may evoke water and land, both of which provided a home for the pelican. Using a simple palette of red, white, and black, the potter was able to create a sense of animation, which would have been heightened when the whistle was blown, perhaps imitating the call of the pelican.”
info via https://art.thewalters.org/object/48.2826/

photo of the object on display at museum (48.2826) H 6 3/16 x W 7 x D 4 3/16 in. (15.75 x 17.78 x 10.67 cm) “The Peruvian Pelican, one of the largest seabirds of the region, is shown in a life-like manner on the top of the vessel. By contrast, the base is covered with abstract spiraling motifs that may evoke water and land, both of which provided a home for the pelican. Using a simple palette of red, white, and black, the potter was able to create a sense of animation, which would have been heightened when the whistle was blown, perhaps imitating the call of the pelican.” info via https://art.thewalters.org/object/48.2826/

photo of gallery labels
“Double-Whistle Vessel with Sea Birds Unidentified artist(s), Lambayeque (Sican) culture,
Peru, 900-1100 CE
Earthenware, slip paint
Anonymous gift, 2009, асс. по. 48.2826”
“Community Voice
Lisa DeLeonardis, PhD
Andean scholar
I have spent my career on the Pacific coast of Peru and have had many opportunities to conduct research in its wildlife sanctuaries. Pelicans are a familiar sight, flying neatly in a single-line formation or nesting in squawking colonies on its rocky shores. In summer months, the birds pair off to breed.
The Double-Whistle Vessel with its two resting birds triggers my memory of these ancient creatures. While seemingly plain in appearance, the bottle's design is animated with visual and aural references. The perch on which the birds rest calls to mind the textile patterning of Andean palatial architecture. The birds' size and their elevated position suggest that this is no ordinary pair, likely referencing a royal couple or founding ancestors. Sound is produced when the bottle is filled with liquid, reminding me of the birds' noisy outbursts-a marked contrast to their silence in flight.”

photo of gallery labels “Double-Whistle Vessel with Sea Birds Unidentified artist(s), Lambayeque (Sican) culture, Peru, 900-1100 CE Earthenware, slip paint Anonymous gift, 2009, асс. по. 48.2826” “Community Voice Lisa DeLeonardis, PhD Andean scholar I have spent my career on the Pacific coast of Peru and have had many opportunities to conduct research in its wildlife sanctuaries. Pelicans are a familiar sight, flying neatly in a single-line formation or nesting in squawking colonies on its rocky shores. In summer months, the birds pair off to breed. The Double-Whistle Vessel with its two resting birds triggers my memory of these ancient creatures. While seemingly plain in appearance, the bottle's design is animated with visual and aural references. The perch on which the birds rest calls to mind the textile patterning of Andean palatial architecture. The birds' size and their elevated position suggest that this is no ordinary pair, likely referencing a royal couple or founding ancestors. Sound is produced when the bottle is filled with liquid, reminding me of the birds' noisy outbursts-a marked contrast to their silence in flight.”

#TwoForTuesday:
Double-Whistle Vessel with Seabirds
Lambayeque (Sican) culture,
Peru, 900-1100 CE
Earthenware, slip paint
15.75 x 17.78 x 10.67 cm
Now on display at The Walters’ newly opened Latin American Art / Arte Latinoamericano galleries.
🆔 Peruvian Pelican
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt
#BirdsInArt

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photo of the object and its gallery label on display at museum
single spout handled effigy vessel in the form of a “potato-bird” (head of a bird with long neck curved downward and beak tucked into chest, body shaped like a potato decorated with eyes), red and buff coloration
“Zoomorphic Vessel in the Shape of a Potato-Bird
Unidentified artists), Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE
Earthenware, slip paint
The University of Pennsylvania Museum, Purchased from Mrs. Norman D. Jarvis, 1966,
асс. по. 66-10-1”

photo of the object and its gallery label on display at museum single spout handled effigy vessel in the form of a “potato-bird” (head of a bird with long neck curved downward and beak tucked into chest, body shaped like a potato decorated with eyes), red and buff coloration “Zoomorphic Vessel in the Shape of a Potato-Bird Unidentified artists), Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE Earthenware, slip paint The University of Pennsylvania Museum, Purchased from Mrs. Norman D. Jarvis, 1966, асс. по. 66-10-1”

“Zoomorphic Vessel in the Shape of a Potato-Bird”
Moche culture, Peru, 500-800 CE
Earthenware, slip paint; H 19 x W 18 cm
Now on display at The Walters Art Museum’s newly opened Latin American Art / Arte Latinoamericano galleries.
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #BirdsInArt

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The Moche culture is recognized as one of the first complex societies of the desert North Coast of Peru. The Moche created monumental ritual temples, expansive irrigation systems, and a prolific art tradition that found expression in various media, including painted and molded ceramic vessels. Although they did not practice a system of writing, Moche art was rendered in a realistic style, offering insight into Pre-Columbian daily life, narrative myth, and ritual tradition.
In Moche art the gods were represented fighting among themselves, or against other supernatural beings or humans. These battles ended with the decapitation of the defeated opponent. The gods are represented holding a half-moon shaped knife known as a tumi.
A crucial element of Moche royal regalia was the nose ornament, whose imagery varies from benign to predatory. In this example, two supernatural decapitators brandish knives over a row of severed human heads. The Moche were among the Andes’ most inventive metalsmiths, and they developed many complex techniques for joining and enriching the surfaces of metals, which they usually worked by hammering rather than casting. The gold-and-silver ornaments were made by first joining gold and silver sheets through heating and hammering. Then came the relief decoration, followed by the selective removal of metal along the joins. Finally, the ornament was trimmed and polished.

The Moche culture is recognized as one of the first complex societies of the desert North Coast of Peru. The Moche created monumental ritual temples, expansive irrigation systems, and a prolific art tradition that found expression in various media, including painted and molded ceramic vessels. Although they did not practice a system of writing, Moche art was rendered in a realistic style, offering insight into Pre-Columbian daily life, narrative myth, and ritual tradition. In Moche art the gods were represented fighting among themselves, or against other supernatural beings or humans. These battles ended with the decapitation of the defeated opponent. The gods are represented holding a half-moon shaped knife known as a tumi. A crucial element of Moche royal regalia was the nose ornament, whose imagery varies from benign to predatory. In this example, two supernatural decapitators brandish knives over a row of severed human heads. The Moche were among the Andes’ most inventive metalsmiths, and they developed many complex techniques for joining and enriching the surfaces of metals, which they usually worked by hammering rather than casting. The gold-and-silver ornaments were made by first joining gold and silver sheets through heating and hammering. Then came the relief decoration, followed by the selective removal of metal along the joins. Finally, the ornament was trimmed and polished.

Nose Ornament
silver and gold
depicting decapitators and heads
Peru, North Coast
Moche culture
50-800 CE

#mocheculture #mochica #peru #northcoast #noseornament #decapitator #silver #gold #handmade #ancientart #art #precolumbianart #andeanart

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