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Tuhinga

Taitara

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

Masks

#1645

Condorhuasi-Alamito artist(s)

400 BCE–500 CE

Stone

Whakaahuatanga

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

Additional Information

Ngā Ahu
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)
Whiwhinga
Gift of Claudia Quentin, 2016
Tau Whakauru
2016.734.4, .5

Ngā Raihana Pūmanawa