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Libation Vessel (Qero)

Creator Name

Nazca

Cultural Context

Nazca

Date

Creation: 500-650 CE (Early Intermediate)

About the Work

Walters Art Museum Object Description
Nazca ceramic artists excelled in painting dynamic imagery using a wide variety of slip-paint colors. They preferred relatively unencumbered vessel surfaces, so that the paintings flow across the ceramic object. Many images are those of deities or iconic references to religious ideology. In other instances, it is clear that the reference is cloth, a highly valued commodity throughout the Andean world. The energetic geometric patterns on this tall Nazca vessel, which dates to the end of the Early Intermediate Period (ca. 550 - 650 CE), have their counterparts in textiles that have survived in the dry southern coastal deserts as well as in painted renderings of clothed figures depicted on pottery. Nazca textile artists were masters of a variety of ...

Work details

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Title

Libation Vessel (Qero)

Creator

Nazca

Worktype

Ceramics; cups (drinking vessels); vessels

Cultural Context

Nazca

Material

earthenware, burnished slip paint

Dimensions

H: 7 7/8 x Diam: 4 3/16 in. (20 x 10.67 cm)

Technique

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Language

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Date

Creation: 500-650 CE (Early Intermediate)

Provenance

given to Walters Art Museum, 2013.; Vincent Price Collection. Ron Messick Fine Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico; purchased by John G. Bourne, between 1990 and 1999; given to Walters Art Museum, 2013.

Style Period

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Rights

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CC0;
GNU Free Documentation License

Inscription

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Location

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Subjects

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Topic

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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Nazca, Libation Vessel (Qero), 500-650 CE (Early Intermediate), Walters Art Museum. CC0, GNU Free Documentation License.

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