MEDIA INFORMATION

 
 
 
COLLECTION NAME:
The AMICA Library
Record
AMICA ID:
MMA_.1994.35.120
AMICA Library Year:
2000
Object Type:
Textiles
Creator Nationality:
South American; Peruvian
Creator Name-CRT:
Peru, Paracas Peninsula
Title:
Border Fragment
View:
Full View
Creation Date:
1st-2nd century
Creation Start Date:
1
Creation End Date:
199
Materials and Techniques:
Cotton, camelid hair
Classification Term:
Textiles-Woven
Dimensions:
L. 41 1/4 in. (104.8 cm)
AMICA Contributor:
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Owner Location:
New York, New York, USA
ID Number:
1994.35.120
Credit Line:
Arthur M. Bullowa Bequest, 1993
Rights:
Context:

The textiles of ancient Peru were made by a people with an inordinate sensitivity to the complexities of structure, pattern, and color. Fortunately preserved through the centuries by the dry climate of the coastal region where they were interred, the fabrics retain much of this complexity today. Textiles discovered in the necropolis of Wari Kayan on the Paracas Peninsula in the early part of the century are particularly striking. Encompassing a wide range of garment type, they exhibit rich colors imaginatively combined, and compelling designs and imagery. This fragment of a border from an embroidered mantle depicts two backbent figures that alternate position and share but do not alternate color schemes. Thought to represent the same skeletonized figure, they have been variously described as falling, floating, flying, dancing, and drowning.

Related Image Identifier Link:
MMA_.ao1994.35.120.R.tif

Border Fragment

Border Fragment