88784473

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Lambayeque (Sican), Pérou. Cuivre Masque funéraire. 21,5 cm L. Licence d'importation espagnole.
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Lambayeque (Sican), Pérou. Cuivre Masque funéraire. 21,5 cm L. Licence d'importation espagnole.

Funerary mask - important piece - Lambayeque (Sican), Perú. 700 - 900 AD Copper with pigments DIMENSIONS: 21,5 cm x 11 cm, wihtout stand. 27 x 21 with stand. PROVENANCE: - Private collection, B. C., Paris, France, acquired before 1980. With Certificate and old photo fo the Parisian gallery Arts Primitifs, June 1984. - Private collection, Barcelona. Condition: Very Good, see images. Documents: With Spanish Import / Export license. This large mask depicting a face with large upturned eyes, prominent nose, thin mouth, and ornaments below the nose and on the ears, once formed part of the funerary regalia of a deceased ruler on Peru’s north coast. Masks made of hammered sheet metal have been found in tombs of both men and women in the Lambayeque region, near the modern city of Chiclayo. Such masks are lacking perforations or openings that would have allowed mortals to see or breathe, and were most likely used exclusively to cover the faces of deceased individuals of high status. In one tomb from Batán Grande, a major center of the Lambayeque culture (also known as Sicán), one mask was found over the face of a mummy, and four others were placed at the foot of the deceased. Although such masks may have only been worn by the dead, danglers attached to the mask would have conveyed a sense of movement, perhaps life, as the mummy bundle was processed to its final resting place deep within a monumental platform mound. Only two danglers below the nose survive on this mask, although at one time many more were present, as indicated by the pairs of perforations on the ears and ear ornaments. Funerary masks of this type vary in size. This mask is one of the largest known, indeed it is one of the largest objects of precious metal known from the ancient Americas. Most are made from a single sheet of hammered gold alloy; in the present example the nose was sculpted separately and attached to the face with four tabs. The mask was made of a ternary alloy known as tumbaga, containing 40 percent gold, 49 percent silver, and 11 percent copper, by weight. The gold appearance was achieved through a process known as depletion gilding, where the copper and silver are removed from the surface of the object through hammering and chemical enrichment. Most of the applied pigment is lost on this mask, but traces of cinnabar, a red mineral pigment, can be seen along the edges of the cheeks and mouth. Other masks retain more of their original pigment, and some were also embellished with feathers, precious stones, and overlays of silver-surfaced metals. The ovoid eyes terminating in a point are characteristically Lambayeque in style, and may represent a being known as the Sicán Deity. According to Izumi Shimada and colleagues, an individual interred with such a mask would have been thought to take on aspects of the Sicán Deity’s power, and would have been transformed into venerated ancestors upon death. Notes: - The piece includes authenticity certificate. - The piece includes Spanish Export License. - The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki. #MasterpiecesW39

88784473

Plus disponible
Lambayeque (Sican), Pérou. Cuivre Masque funéraire. 21,5 cm L. Licence d'importation espagnole.

Lambayeque (Sican), Pérou. Cuivre Masque funéraire. 21,5 cm L. Licence d'importation espagnole.

Funerary mask

- important piece -

Lambayeque (Sican), Perú.

700 - 900 AD

Copper with pigments

DIMENSIONS: 21,5 cm x 11 cm, wihtout stand. 27 x 21 with stand.

PROVENANCE:
- Private collection, B. C., Paris, France, acquired before 1980. With Certificate and old photo fo the Parisian gallery Arts Primitifs, June 1984.
- Private collection, Barcelona.

Condition: Very Good, see images.

Documents: With Spanish Import / Export license.

This large mask depicting a face with large upturned eyes, prominent nose, thin mouth, and ornaments below the nose and on the ears, once formed part of the funerary regalia of a deceased ruler on Peru’s north coast. Masks made of hammered sheet metal have been found in tombs of both men and women in the Lambayeque region, near the modern city of Chiclayo. Such masks are lacking perforations or openings that would have allowed mortals to see or breathe, and were most likely used exclusively to cover the faces of deceased individuals of high status. In one tomb from Batán Grande, a major center of the Lambayeque culture (also known as Sicán), one mask was found over the face of a mummy, and four others were placed at the foot of the deceased. Although such masks may have only been worn by the dead, danglers attached to the mask would have conveyed a sense of movement, perhaps life, as the mummy bundle was processed to its final resting place deep within a monumental platform mound. Only two danglers below the nose survive on this mask, although at one time many more were present, as indicated by the pairs of perforations on the ears and ear ornaments.

Funerary masks of this type vary in size. This mask is one of the largest known, indeed it is one of the largest objects of precious metal known from the ancient Americas. Most are made from a single sheet of hammered gold alloy; in the present example the nose was sculpted separately and attached to the face with four tabs. The mask was made of a ternary alloy known as tumbaga, containing 40 percent gold, 49 percent silver, and 11 percent copper, by weight. The gold appearance was achieved through a process known as depletion gilding, where the copper and silver are removed from the surface of the object through hammering and chemical enrichment.

Most of the applied pigment is lost on this mask, but traces of cinnabar, a red mineral pigment, can be seen along the edges of the cheeks and mouth. Other masks retain more of their original pigment, and some were also embellished with feathers, precious stones, and overlays of silver-surfaced metals. The ovoid eyes terminating in a point are characteristically Lambayeque in style, and may represent a being known as the Sicán Deity. According to Izumi Shimada and colleagues, an individual interred with such a mask would have been thought to take on aspects of the Sicán Deity’s power, and would have been transformed into venerated ancestors upon death.

Notes:
- The piece includes authenticity certificate.
- The piece includes Spanish Export License.
- The seller guarantees that he acquired this piece according to all national and international laws related to the ownership of cultural property. Provenance statement seen by Catawiki.


#MasterpiecesW39

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