Bowl with stirrup handle.

CULTURE: Nazca, Perú

PERIOD: 100-800 AD.

MATERIAL: Terracotta

DIMENSIONS: Height 19.2 cm.

CONDITION: Good condition. It has been repaired from the original fragments.

PROVENANCE:

-Private collection of Jean Pierre Cottier and Fiorella Cottier-Angeli, Geneva, Switzerland. Acquired between 1960 and 1980 from, among others, Carlos Campilli (Miami, United States of America), Sophie Pdgorska (Geneva, Switzerland) and Marguerite Motte (Paris, France).

-Yossef Maiman private collection. Acquired between 2000 and 2008.

DOCUMENTATION: Spanish Import license included.

DESCRIPTION:

The Nazca culture developed in the valleys and coast of southern Peru, including Pisco, Ica, Cañete, Acarí and, especially, the Nazca Valley itself. This coastal desert region is carved by narrow fertile valleys.

Artistically, the Nazca are most famous for their geoglyphs, enormous drawings traced out on the bare ground of the pampa north of the settlement of Cawachi. They outline anthropomorphic, zoomorphic and phytomorphic shapes, as well as straight lines several kilometres long, all of them amazingly precise. The actual significance of the Nazca figures is not known, but most of them are so large they are best appreciated from the air. According to the main hypothesis, the place served as an astronomical observatory; another holds that it was a major ceremonial centre.

Their pottery is renowned for the quality of their vases with their fine, complexly painted imagery, and especially for the polychrome colouring of the motifs, some of which are done in six or seven different colours. The most typical type of Nazca ceramic vessel was the bridge-handled vase with two spouts. These were often painted with domestic images such as flowers, fruit, birds, animals and insects, though some bear mythological figures or individuals with both human and animal attributes.

The Nazca buried their dead in funerary bundles composed of several layers of wrapping and clothing, inside of which they deposited pottery vessels and other objects as grave goods. Higher ranking individuals had more complex bundles, which in some cases were made up of dozens of layers of textile. Severed human heads have been found among the grave goods in many graves, indicating the importance of human sacrifice in this society. This practice was apparently associated with fertility rites.





Notes:
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.
The seller will take care that any necessary permits, like an export license will be arranged, he will inform the buyer about the status of it if this takes more than a few days.
The piece includes authenticity certificate.
The piece includes Spanish Export License.

Der Verkäufer stellt sich vor

Galerie für antike Kunst - Archäologie in Barcelona mit mehr als fünfzehn Jahren Erfahrung. Spezialisiert auf klassische Kunst, ägyptische Kunst, asiatische Kunst und präkolumbianische Kunst. Es garantiert die Echtheit aller seiner Stücke. Es nimmt an den wichtigsten Kunstmessen in Spanien teil, wie Feriarte, sowie an Messen im Ausland, BRAFA, Parcours des Mondes, Cultures Brussels. Alle Stücke werden mit einer vom spanischen Kulturministerium ausgestellten Ausfuhrgenehmigung verschickt. Wir versenden schnell per DHL Express oder Direct Art Transport.
Übersetzt mit Google Übersetzer

Bowl with stirrup handle.

CULTURE: Nazca, Perú

PERIOD: 100-800 AD.

MATERIAL: Terracotta

DIMENSIONS: Height 19.2 cm.

CONDITION: Good condition. It has been repaired from the original fragments.

PROVENANCE:

-Private collection of Jean Pierre Cottier and Fiorella Cottier-Angeli, Geneva, Switzerland. Acquired between 1960 and 1980 from, among others, Carlos Campilli (Miami, United States of America), Sophie Pdgorska (Geneva, Switzerland) and Marguerite Motte (Paris, France).

-Yossef Maiman private collection. Acquired between 2000 and 2008.

DOCUMENTATION: Spanish Import license included.

DESCRIPTION:

The Nazca culture developed in the valleys and coast of southern Peru, including Pisco, Ica, Cañete, Acarí and, especially, the Nazca Valley itself. This coastal desert region is carved by narrow fertile valleys.

Artistically, the Nazca are most famous for their geoglyphs, enormous drawings traced out on the bare ground of the pampa north of the settlement of Cawachi. They outline anthropomorphic, zoomorphic and phytomorphic shapes, as well as straight lines several kilometres long, all of them amazingly precise. The actual significance of the Nazca figures is not known, but most of them are so large they are best appreciated from the air. According to the main hypothesis, the place served as an astronomical observatory; another holds that it was a major ceremonial centre.

Their pottery is renowned for the quality of their vases with their fine, complexly painted imagery, and especially for the polychrome colouring of the motifs, some of which are done in six or seven different colours. The most typical type of Nazca ceramic vessel was the bridge-handled vase with two spouts. These were often painted with domestic images such as flowers, fruit, birds, animals and insects, though some bear mythological figures or individuals with both human and animal attributes.

The Nazca buried their dead in funerary bundles composed of several layers of wrapping and clothing, inside of which they deposited pottery vessels and other objects as grave goods. Higher ranking individuals had more complex bundles, which in some cases were made up of dozens of layers of textile. Severed human heads have been found among the grave goods in many graves, indicating the importance of human sacrifice in this society. This practice was apparently associated with fertility rites.





Notes:
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.
The seller will take care that any necessary permits, like an export license will be arranged, he will inform the buyer about the status of it if this takes more than a few days.
The piece includes authenticity certificate.
The piece includes Spanish Export License.

Der Verkäufer stellt sich vor

Galerie für antike Kunst - Archäologie in Barcelona mit mehr als fünfzehn Jahren Erfahrung. Spezialisiert auf klassische Kunst, ägyptische Kunst, asiatische Kunst und präkolumbianische Kunst. Es garantiert die Echtheit aller seiner Stücke. Es nimmt an den wichtigsten Kunstmessen in Spanien teil, wie Feriarte, sowie an Messen im Ausland, BRAFA, Parcours des Mondes, Cultures Brussels. Alle Stücke werden mit einer vom spanischen Kulturministerium ausgestellten Ausfuhrgenehmigung verschickt. Wir versenden schnell per DHL Express oder Direct Art Transport.
Übersetzt mit Google Übersetzer
Kultur
Nazca, Peru
Name of object
Schale mit Steigbügelhenkel. 100-800 n. Chr. 19,2 cm hoch. Spanische Importlizenz.
Jahrhundert/ Zeitraum
100-800 AD.
Herkunft
Private Sammlung
Herkunftsland
Unbekannt
Material
Terracotta
Zustand
Restauriert

2051 Bewertungen (750 in den letzten 12 Monaten)
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2051 Bewertungen (750 in den letzten 12 Monaten)
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Der Verkäufer garantiert und kann belegen, dass das Objekt legal erworben wurde. Der Verkäufer wurde von Catawiki darüber informiert, dass er die Unterlagen, die gemäß den Gesetzen und Vorschriften seines Landes erforderlich sind, zur Verfügung stellen muss. Der Verkäufer garantiert, dass er berechtigt ist, das Objekt zu verkaufen/auszuführen. Der Verkäufer wird dem Käufer alle Informationen, die zur Provenienz des Objekts vorliegen, zur Verfügung stellen. Der Verkäufer versichert, dass alle erforderlichen Genehmigungen eingeholt wurden/werden. Der Verkäufer wird den Käufer unverzüglich über etwaige Verzögerungen bei der Einholung dieser Genehmigungen informieren.

Der Verkäufer garantiert und kann belegen, dass das Objekt legal erworben wurde. Der Verkäufer wurde von Catawiki darüber informiert, dass er die Unterlagen, die gemäß den Gesetzen und Vorschriften seines Landes erforderlich sind, zur Verfügung stellen muss. Der Verkäufer garantiert, dass er berechtigt ist, das Objekt zu verkaufen/auszuführen. Der Verkäufer wird dem Käufer alle Informationen, die zur Provenienz des Objekts vorliegen, zur Verfügung stellen. Der Verkäufer versichert, dass alle erforderlichen Genehmigungen eingeholt wurden/werden. Der Verkäufer wird den Käufer unverzüglich über etwaige Verzögerungen bei der Einholung dieser Genehmigungen informieren.