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Source Description
This object pertains to the Andean theme of sacrifice and death as a religious act of regeneration and renewal. The expertly painted Nazca bottle, with double spouts and bridge handle, represents the highest achievement in quality and pictorial complexity of Nazca pottery painting. Its imagery features the so-called Anthropomorphic Mythical Being, which may symbolize powerful spirits in nature. At least fifteen subtypes of this spirit being are known, each perhaps corresponding to specific forces. A shared icon among them is the presence of trophy heads hanging at the waist (as seen here) or in close proximity to its mouth. On this vessel, a Nazca warrior grasps the being's "tail" as if he has captured or is in control of the spirit force. The line of female heads around the vessel may be a symbolic representation of the earth. The images on the pottery vessel relate to the theme of sacrifice and agricultural fertility. Among the Nazca, the severed head was likened to a seed from which sprang renewed life in the form of young plants; large caches of trophy heads found at Nazca sites are the remains of religious rites intended to ensure agricultural success. In short, the human trophy head was not only the most sacred of offerings to the spiritual forces of nature; they were also integral to the pan-Andean ideology of death and regeneration, being but two parts of the same universal dyad. Death, caused by sacrifice and decapitation, is not the end; rather it leads to rejuvenation and new life.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
80183
label
Stirrup-Spouted Bottle
core
obj
dtoType
object
citationUrl
pageCount
2
Source metadata
id
80183
contentType
object
stage
normalized
title
Stirrup-Spouted Bottle
description
This object pertains to the Andean theme of sacrifice and death as a religious act of regeneration and renewal. The expertly painted Nazca bottle, with double spouts and bridge handle, represents the highest achievement in quality and pictorial complexity of Nazca pottery painting. Its imagery features the so-called Anthropomorphic Mythical Being, which may symbolize powerful spirits in nature. At least fifteen subtypes of this spirit being are known, each perhaps corresponding to specific forces. A shared icon among them is the presence of trophy heads hanging at the waist (as seen here) or in close proximity to its mouth. On this vessel, a Nazca warrior grasps the being's "tail" as if he has captured or is in control of the spirit force. The line of female heads around the vessel may be a symbolic representation of the earth. The images on the pottery vessel relate to the theme of sacrifice and agricultural fertility. Among the Nazca, the severed head was likened to a seed from which sprang renewed life in the form of young plants; large caches of trophy heads found at Nazca sites are the remains of religious rites intended to ensure agricultural success. In short, the human trophy head was not only the most sacred of offerings to the spiritual forces of nature; they were also integral to the pan-Andean ideology of death and regeneration, being but two parts of the same universal dyad. Death, caused by sacrifice and decapitation, is not the end; rather it leads to rejuvenation and new life.
provenance
John G. Bourne; given to Walters Art Museum, 2009.
date
450-650 CE (Early Intermediate (Phase 6))
citationUrl
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
genreSpecific
Ceramics
vessels
bottles
imageCount
2
pageCount
2
source
import
dimensions
units
cm
width
17
height
16.8
dimensionsRaw
H: 6 11/16 x Diam: 6 5/8 in. (16.99 x 16.76 cm)
Source extras
cul
Nazca
med
earthenware with burnished slip paint
creator_ids
31447
collection_ids
AME
exhibition_ids
2988
3251
3532
Page inventory
seq
1
type
photo
mediaId
d1a1dac4a2077de8
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no
seq
2
type
photo
mediaId
45ee4dc4d2e91a9b
hasOcr
no
hasDescription
no