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  • Mask, Condorhuasi-Alamito artist(s), Stone, Condorhuasi-Alamito

Masks

#1645

Condorhuasi-Alamito artist(s)

400 BCE–500 CE

Stone

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Stone masks provide new identities to their wearers, including the dead as they were transformed into ancestors. Likewise, images of faces and felines changed vessels, perhaps conveying a sense of life to what is otherwise seen as an inanimate material. Stone beakers, carefully carved and designed to last, were sometimes covered with delicate incised designs featuring two-headed serpents and geometric forms.

1645. Masks, Condorhuasi-Alamito artists

Benjamin Alberti

OLELO HOIKE

Anana
H. 6 3/4 × W. 5 1/2 × D. 2 in. (17.1 × 14 × 5.1 cm); H. 4 7/8 × W. 4 1/4 × D. 1 1/4 in. (12.4 × 10.8 × 3.2 cm)
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Gift of Claudia Quentin, 2016
Helu Komo
2016.734.4, .5

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