Beaker with face
This stone beaker features a carved anthropomorphic face with a stepped headdress on the upper half of one side of the vessel. The abstracted face is indicated by the prominent brow ridge and nose with a carved mouth and circles for eyes. The vessel is covered with incised designs featuring bi-cephalic serpent motifs and geometric forms. The shape of this vessel is similar to a type of beaker (kero) known from the Central Andes.
The Condorhuasi-Alamito peoples were llama pastoralists in the area that is now the Catamarca province of Argentina. They were skilled artisans in a variety of media, including ceramic, metal, and stone. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Condorhuasi-Alamito peoples maintained extensive long-distance contacts with other regions, including the important site of Tiwanaku, near Lake Titicaca in what is now Bolivia.
The Condorhuasi-Alamito peoples were llama pastoralists in the area that is now the Catamarca province of Argentina. They were skilled artisans in a variety of media, including ceramic, metal, and stone. Archaeological evidence suggests that the Condorhuasi-Alamito peoples maintained extensive long-distance contacts with other regions, including the important site of Tiwanaku, near Lake Titicaca in what is now Bolivia.
Artwork Details
- Title: Beaker with face
- Artist: Condorhuasi-Alamito artist(s)
- Date: 500 BCE–500 CE
- Geography: Argentina, Northwest Argentina
- Culture: Condorhuasi-Alamito
- Medium: Stone
- Dimensions: H. 9 × W. 4 7/8 × D. 5 1/2 in. (22.9 × 12.4 × 14 cm)
- Classification: Stone-Vessels
- Credit Line: Gift of Claudia Quentin, 2016
- Object Number: 2016.734.1
- Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing
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