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  • ? moche 1

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  • ? metropolitan museum of art 138

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  • ID: 424
  • Uploader: IantumarosOfGaul »
  • Date: 11 days ago
  • Approver: Addison »
  • Size: 137 KB .jpg (859x1200) »
  • Source: metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/309440 »
  • Rating: General
  • Views: 18
  • Score: 0
  • Favorites: 0
  • Status: Active

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Resized to 98% of original (view original)
metropolitan museum of art by moche
Original Commentary

Stirrup-spout bottle with warclub and crab warrior

This vessel shape is a variant on a common type known as a stirrup-spout bottle—the shape of the spout recalls the stirrup on a horse's saddle—and it was a much-favored form on Peru's northern coast for about 2,500 years. Although the importance and symbolism of this distinctive shape remains puzzling to scholars, it has been suggested that the double-branch/single-spout configuration may have prevented evaporation of liquids, and/or that it was convenient for carrying. Early in the first millennium CE, the Moche elaborated stirrup-spout bottles into sculptural shapes depicting a wide range of subjects, including human figures, animals, and plants worked with a great deal of naturalism. About 500 years later, bottle chambers became predominantly globular, as above, providing large surfaces for painting complex multi-figure scenes.

On this particular vessel, the spout was moved to the side and the long-necked bottle shape sculpted into a novel depiction of a mace head with a painted scene below. Scholars refer to this painting style as “fineline” for the detailed figures and scenes delicately slip-painted in red on a white background (slip is a suspension of clay and/or other colorants in water).

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