Dance Sling Item Number: 3486/34 from the MOA: University of British Columbia
A dance sling (wichi wichi) that has a solid braid and a flat braid as handles on either side of a vestigial cradle. The thick braid features a diamond pattern in shades of brown, grey, and black called “amapolas”, the name for a poppy that grows on the banks of rivers. The main tassel end features three smaller tassels in yellow, red, and forest green, followed by a larger dark red tassel, branching into four flat braids finished with smaller tassels in dark burgundy, grey, orange, and yellow. Attached to the opposite end of the thick braid is the cradle with a triangular motif, and 8 small tassels in pink, grey, and orange along the top and bottom edge separated from each other in even increments. The flat braid attached to the other end of the cradle, finished with a small multicoloured tassel.
Different types of slings are used for different purposes in the Andes. Some are used for hunting or herding, but another type is used as a dance accessory. In the Cusco region, the type that has a small vestigial cradle and many colourful tassels attached near one end of the braid (in Quechua, called a 'wichi wichi'), is used as a dance sling. Sometimes secondary braids with many tassels are suspended from the main braid, and these are worn across the chest or around the waist, with the tassels mainly hanging below the waist. Another type of dance sling, which incorporates pieces of camelid pelt, is used in the Puno area by men and women in the wiphala dance, a dance that ensures success in hunting.
Sling handles are usually made as solid braids, a technique that is done by holding the braid in one’s fist and crossing threads from the four quadrants across the crown of the braid. Variations in colour, slant, and sequence in the crossing threads produce a variety of diamond or oblique patterns.
Purchased by the donor between 1978 and 1984 in the Cuzco area.