Lobster Effigy Vessel
Creator Name
Cultural Context
Date
Source
About the Work
Walters Art Museum Object Description
The coast of Peru is bathed in the Humboldt Current, which sweeps cold water from the Antarctic along the South American coast and northwards to Mexico and the Pacific Northwest. Rich in plankton and other marine animals, the Humboldt Current supports one of the world's most fertile fishing grounds. Early Andean peoples harvested its bounty, with fish and shellfish being a primary source of protein not only for coastal peoples but also those in the highlands. This lobster effigy vessel, with its small bridge-spout handle typical of Nazca ceramics, is a masterful example of the ceramic effigy vessel form.For the latest information about this object, Lobster Effigy Vessel, visit the Online Collection of the Walters Art Museum.
Work details
"--" = no data available
Title
Creator
Worktype
Cultural Context
Material
Dimensions
Technique
--
Language
--
Date
Provenance
Style Period
--
Rights
Inscription
--
Location
--
Source
Subjects
--
Topic
--
Related Content
--
All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:
Nazca, Lobster Effigy Vessel, AD 300-600 (Early Intermediate Phases IIII-IV), Walters Art Museum. CC0, GNU Free Documentation License.
Help us improve this content!
Let our archivists know if you have something to add.
Save this work.
Start an account to add this work to your personal curated collection.
