Skip to main content

Kōwhiria te Reo

Ki te kore ngā kaiārahi e whakarato i ngā whakamāoritanga i roto i tō reo, ka whakamāoritia e Google. Heoi, ko ētahi kaiārahi e wātea ana i roto i tō rātou reo taketake anake.

Tuhinga

Taitara

  • Stirrup-spout bottle, Cupisnique artist(s), Ceramic, Cupisnique

Stirrup-spout bottle

#1644

Cupisnique artist(s)

800–500 BCE

Ceramic

Whakaahuatanga

Early potters on Peru’s North Coast created bottles with a spout that has been compared to the shape of a riding saddle stirrup—a vessel type that would endure for another 2,500 years. Artists in this period favored muted colors that highlighted the play between textured and polished surfaces, a technique that suggests that these works were designed for both visual and tactile experiences.

1644. Stirrup-spout bottle, Cupisnique artist(s)

Hugo Ikehara-Tsukayama

Additional Information

Ngā Ahu
H. 9 5/8 × W. 5 1/2 × D. 5 1/2 in. (24.4 × 14 × 14 cm)
Whiwhinga
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Gift of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1969
Tau Whakauru
1978.412.40

Ngā Raihana Pūmanawa