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Kero Cup1993.2

Objects of Inca tradition such as plates, trays, and kero cups were treasured by the Peruvian Indian nobility. Kero cups were displayed in indigenous elite homes along with European-style objects and silver as visible reminders of their owners’ noble ancestry. This pair is decorated with an Inca male and female standing under a rainbow, a symbol that connoted Inca royal authority. Keros were made and used in pairs for the consumption of chicha, or maize beer, in ritual ceremonies (see illustration) that continued through the colonial period. The use of pairs reflected the important Andean concepts of duality and reciprocity.


Los objetos de tradición incaica como platos, bandejas y copas o vasos kero eran atesorados por la nobleza indígena peruana. Los keros se exhibían en casas indígenas de la élite junto a objetos de estilo europeo y platería como recordatorios visibles del linaje noble de sus propietarios. Este par está decorado con un hombre y mujer incas de pie bajo un arcoíris, símbolo que connotaba la autoridad real inca. Los keros eran fabricados y usados en pares para consumir chicha (cerveza de maíz) en ceremonias rituales (ver ilustración), costumbre que continuó durante el periodo colonial. El empleo de pares reflejaba el importante concepto andino de dualidad y reciprocidad.

Material
wood with pigment inlay
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Jar35.654

A. Augustus Healy Fund

Culture
Maya
Material
ceramic and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Jar37.2967PA

Frank Sherman Benson Fund and the Henry L. Batterman Fund

Culture
Tonala
Material
ceramic and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Jar35.655

A. Augustus Healy Fund

Culture
Maya
Material
ceramic and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Jar35.650

Polychrome cylindrical vessel with processional scene of walking and kneeling figures/deities carrying items on their backs and in their hands. One of the figures is the Merchant God or God L. The rim is decorated with a painted basketry design in black outlined in orange.

Culture
Maya
Material
ceramic and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Hollow Figure of a Dignitary Holding a Flute68.97

Gift of The Roebling Society

Culture
Chavin
Material
ceramic and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Funerary Mask64.94

Ceramic funerary mask decorated with colored resin enamels. Mask is composed of a Paracas bowl to which the details have been applied by incision or application. Eyes consist of 2 interior cones decorated with concentric circles. 11 tabs project from rim of the face, 8 of which represent serpent heads. A 12th projection at the top of the mask forms the head of a human who is impersonating the Oculate Being by wearing this deity's mask. It's body is represented two dimensionally by incisions embellished with red, yellow and green resin enamel. Its nose is a smaller version of the huge probocis of the mask.

Culture
Paracas Cavernas
Material
ceramic, resin and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Fragment of Textile56.128

Frank L. Babbott Fund

Culture
Chimú
Material
cotton and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Fox Runner Effigy Vessel36.332

Stirrup-spout effigy vessel depicting a seated anthropomorphic fox (fox runner) with a fox head and human body. The figure wears a large circular disk headdress, a woven belt, and wrist and leg ornaments. He grasps the headdress ties in his hands. Condition: good.

Culture
Moche
Material
ceramic and pigment
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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Lure22.1805

Fish lure or charm carved in the shape of a small seal with a perforation in the middle. The perforations around the face of the seal have been infilled with black pigment.

Culture
Eskimo
Material
ivory, ink ? and pigment ?
Holding Institution
Brooklyn Museum
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