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This information was automatically generated from data provided by MOA: University of British Columbia. It has been standardized to aid in finding and grouping information within the RRN. Accuracy and meaning should be verified from the Data Source tab.

Description

Wooden staff with finial in the form of a standing male, holding a cup and carrying two large ears of corn on his back. The face and chest have the remains of a dark red resin-like paint. Fragments of copper or copper alloy sheeting adhere in several places and many metal tacks protrude from the front and back of the figure. A bright red-orange band of paint encircles the staff a few inches below the finial. The bottom of the staff is broken off.

History Of Use

Wooden staffs have been found in elite burials, from Moche times onward (Larco). The Chimu and Inca staffs are often sheathed in gold-surfaces metals, like the examples in Bennett and Menzel.

Narrative

Inca Style, Late Horizon; 1476-1532 C.E.

Iconographic Meaning

Corn is closely associated with Incan iconography. The legendary garden in the Coricancha was said to be filled with ears of golden corn.

Item History

  • Made in Peru between 1476 and 1532
  • Collected between 1949 and 1966
  • Owned by Anonymous before May 4, 1981
  • Received from Anonymous (Donor) on May 4, 1981

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