Double-chambered bottle

250 BCE–450 CE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 360
Double-chambered bottles were a common vessel form among the Bahía people of coastal Ecuador. The chambers, which were round and squat or tall and slender, as here, were joined at the bottom by a tube and at the top by a strap handle. A single, narrow spout tops one of the chambers, while the other vessel serves as a base for modeled figurative sculptures. On this bottle, two fantastic iguana-like creatures sit side by side at the top, their thick, long tails hanging down the side of the container. The iguanas wear necklaces and head crests; long streamers emerge from their open, fanged mouths; their bodies have dorsal crests and winglike elements projecting on the sides. The dull, bumpy surface of the animals, covered with light green pigment, contrasts with the smooth, burnished finish of the red-slipped chambers. The hollow iguanas function as whistles, their several holes producing a sound when the liquid in the bottle is poured out. Iguanas or dragonlike creatures and serpents are frequent motifs in Bahía art and seem to have played an important role in local mythology.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Double-chambered bottle
  • Artist: Bahía artist(s)
  • Date: 250 BCE–450 CE
  • Geography: Ecuador
  • Culture: Bahia
  • Medium: Ceramic, celadonite
  • Dimensions: H. 7 1/4 × W. 10 in. (18.4 × 25.4 cm)
  • Classification: Ceramics-Containers
  • Credit Line: Gift of Peggy and Tessim Zorach, 1988
  • Object Number: 1988.117.7
  • Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

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