Skip to main content

Xaiv hom lus

Thaum cov lus qhia tsis muab kev txhais lus hauv koj cov lus, lawv feem ntau txhais los ntawm Google. Txawm li cas los xij, qee cov lus qhia tsuas yog muaj nyob hauv lawv cov lus qub.

Cov ntawv sau tseg

Cov lus piav qhia

  • Nine Feathered Panels, Feathers on cotton, camelid hair, Wari

Feathered panels

#1654

Wari artist(s)

650–1000 CE

Feathers, cotton, camelid fiber

Kev piav qhia

These are nine of what may have originally been a set of some ninety-six panels covered with blue-and-yellow macaw feathers. Discovered in 1943, the panels had been rolled up, placed in ceramic jars, and buried. Most feature braided cords that hang from their sides, suggesting that the works may have been secured to some kind of structure.  

Although these feathered panels were found—and likely woven—in the dry western foothills of the Andes, macaws are native to the Amazon Rainforest, far to the east. Recent research suggests that while some plumes were sourced from wild birds, others were harvested from those raised in captivity, either in the Amazon region or on the Peruvian coast.

1654. Feathered panels, Wari artist(s)

Arabel Fernández López

Cov ntaub ntawv ntxiv

Qhov ntev
H. 81 1/2 in. × W. 20 ft. 1 3/4 in. (207 × 614 cm)
Qhuas
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Bequest of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1979
Tus lej nkag
1979.206.464, .466–.473

Software Licenses