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The burial-urn style of the lower Magdalena River region of northern Colombia is renowned for its figural portrayals of a male personage sitting atop a low bench that adorn the urns' lids. Often birds, as totemic or otherwise symbolic icons, embellish the urns' sides. The modeled male figure atop the lid typically is portrayed nude, although occasionally he may be ornamented with a necklace or other body decoration. Here, the pierced earlobes indicate that the figure originally wore some type of ear ornament. The ornamentation of burial urns with all manner of modeled embellishments, be they figural or more abstract, recalls the sixteenth-century Spanish chronicler Pedro de Aguado, who described the bones and ashes of a cremated chief having been placed in a clay vessel that then was garnished with jewels and other finery.
Page data
- Page
- 3
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- ae590223abefbd1d
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 80370
- Core
- obj
- Type
- object
DTO data
{
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"sourceUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/2009.20.215",
"contentType": "object",
"stage": "normalized",
"title": "Burial Urn",
"description": "The burial-urn style of the lower Magdalena River region of northern Colombia is renowned for its figural portrayals of a male personage sitting atop a low bench that adorn the urns' lids. Often birds, as totemic or otherwise symbolic icons, embellish the urns' sides. The modeled male figure atop the lid typically is portrayed nude, although occasionally he may be ornamented with a necklace or other body decoration. Here, the pierced earlobes indicate that the figure originally wore some type of ear ornament. The ornamentation of burial urns with all manner of modeled embellishments, be they figural or more abstract, recalls the sixteenth-century Spanish chronicler Pedro de Aguado, who described the bones and ashes of a cremated chief having been placed in a clay vessel that then was garnished with jewels and other finery.",
"provenance": "Ron Messick Fine Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; John G. Bourne, February 5, 1998, by purchase.",
"date": "AD 1000-1600",
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"rightsUri": "CC0",
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"Ceramics",
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"dimensionsRaw": "H: 29 5/16 x W: 12 15/16 x D: 10 1/4 in. (74.4 x 32.9 x 26 cm)"
}
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Document identity
{
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"label": "Burial Urn",
"core": "obj",
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}
Document source metadata
{
"id": "80370",
"sourceUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/2009.20.215",
"contentType": "object",
"stage": "normalized",
"title": "Burial Urn",
"description": "The burial-urn style of the lower Magdalena River region of northern Colombia is renowned for its figural portrayals of a male personage sitting atop a low bench that adorn the urns' lids. Often birds, as totemic or otherwise symbolic icons, embellish the urns' sides. The modeled male figure atop the lid typically is portrayed nude, although occasionally he may be ornamented with a necklace or other body decoration. Here, the pierced earlobes indicate that the figure originally wore some type of ear ornament. The ornamentation of burial urns with all manner of modeled embellishments, be they figural or more abstract, recalls the sixteenth-century Spanish chronicler Pedro de Aguado, who described the bones and ashes of a cremated chief having been placed in a clay vessel that then was garnished with jewels and other finery.",
"provenance": "Ron Messick Fine Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico [date and mode of acquisition unknown]; John G. Bourne, February 5, 1998, by purchase.",
"date": "AD 1000-1600",
"citationUrl": "https://purl.thewalters.org/art/2009.20.215",
"rightsUri": "CC0",
"language": "en",
"genreSpecific": [
"Ceramics",
"urns",
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],
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"dimensions": [
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],
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}
Document source extras
{
"cul": "Moskito",
"style": "Moskito",
"med": "earthenware, traces of white ground and yellow pigment",
"creator_ids": [
"15523"
],
"collection_ids": [
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],
"exhibition_ids": [
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]
}
Page context
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