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| Type of Object: | Ceremonial Object |
|---|---|
| Materials: | Ceramic |
| Measurements: | Size varies from 15 cm. to 40 cm. |
| Date or Period: | Colonial (1533-1825) |
| Maker: | Quechua |
| Designated List Section: | VI A Colonial and Republican Ceramics -- Ceremonial Drinking Vessels |
| Date of Import Restriction: | 12/07/01 |
| Photograph: | National Museum of Ethnography and Folklore (MUSEF) |
| Copyright: | National Museum of Ethnography and Folklore (MUSEF) |
| Description of Designated List Category Subject to Import Restrictions: | |
|---|---|
| Containers and serving vessels used in the ceremonial context of chicha drinking. In post-Columbian times these are hard-paste ceramics with glassy surfaces resulting from the application of a mineral glaze. May be brown, green, blue, red or any combination of colors. Vary in size and shape from handled jars, pitchers, cups, and vases, to animal-shapes like the bull, tiger, or llama. This example is a pitcher with circular base, globular body, short neck with an anterior spout and a posterior handle. It has incised and high relief decoration with anthropomorphic motifs, rosettes and maize. It is used in agricultural rituals. | |
| Keywords: | |
| glazed, jar, pitcher, Quechua, |
Bolivia
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