莫切,秘鲁, Terracotta 精美的Huaco具象雕塑,长20厘米。公元400年至800年。西班牙出口许可证。





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精美的莫切文化人像谓穗壶,来自秘鲁,公元400–800年,陶土釉彩制,长约20厘米、高约18厘米,状态良好,具有西班牙出口许可,来自私人收藏。
卖家的描述
Fine Stirrup jar Huaco of a Figure - nice form -
Moche, Peru, 400 - 800 AD.
Terracotta and pigments
20 cm long and 18 cm height
Provenance:
- Private collection, Bordeaux, France, 1970 - 1980. Public acution. Thence by descendent.
DOCUMENTS:
- Spanish Export License.
Condition: Good condition, a part of the base has lost its varnish and is scorched, see photos.
The Moche culture inhabited the coast of present-day northern Peru, concentrating in the valleys of Lambayeque, Chicama, Moche and Virú. This desert region is crossed by several rivers that flow down into the Pacific Ocean, where marine resources are plentiful.
The Moche produced fine ceramic, textile and precious metal pieces. Their characteristic style can be seen in a wide range of goods such as fire-engraved gourds, wall murals, featherwork art, body painting and tattoos. Their ceramic decoration displays a level of skill that has rarely been surpassed, and included such techniques as incision, bas-relief with stamps, and painting on smooth surfaces. Many were made in state-run workshops that mass-produced pieces from molds. Their ceramics came in a variety of forms and decorative styles and displayed myths and ritual motifs as well. Notable among these earthenware forms were the so-called “portrait bottles”, bottles molded with the face of a well-known Moche figure. These highly detailed facial portraits reflect the Moche’s own use of face paint and/or tattoos, as well as elaborate headdresses. This portrait-making expertise can also be observed in everyday scenes and erotic representations, as well as in figures of individuals that were hunch backed, blind, or suffered from other disorders. They were skillful metalworkers, using gold, copper and silver to make ear ornaments, nose rings, bracelets, necklace beads, tweezers and a variety of tools. Especially notable is the tumi or ceremonial knife that was usually only carried by Moche officials.
Moche ceramics provide detailed representations of the culture’s supernatural world, including deities, myths, sacred animals and ceremonial practices. Their deities take the form of foxes, owls, hummingbirds, falcons and felines. These figures were servants of greater gods that had human form and sported elaborate outfits and ferocious faces with crossed fangs.
Tombs of important Moche individuals were rectangular and made of adobe, with niches for offerings. Some bodies were laid on cane mats, while others were left in caves inside cane coffins. People of the elite class were buried with metal masks and a rich array of grave goods, servants and animals accompanying them. The famous “Lord of Sipán” is the most notable example of this kind of burial.
卖家故事
Fine Stirrup jar Huaco of a Figure - nice form -
Moche, Peru, 400 - 800 AD.
Terracotta and pigments
20 cm long and 18 cm height
Provenance:
- Private collection, Bordeaux, France, 1970 - 1980. Public acution. Thence by descendent.
DOCUMENTS:
- Spanish Export License.
Condition: Good condition, a part of the base has lost its varnish and is scorched, see photos.
The Moche culture inhabited the coast of present-day northern Peru, concentrating in the valleys of Lambayeque, Chicama, Moche and Virú. This desert region is crossed by several rivers that flow down into the Pacific Ocean, where marine resources are plentiful.
The Moche produced fine ceramic, textile and precious metal pieces. Their characteristic style can be seen in a wide range of goods such as fire-engraved gourds, wall murals, featherwork art, body painting and tattoos. Their ceramic decoration displays a level of skill that has rarely been surpassed, and included such techniques as incision, bas-relief with stamps, and painting on smooth surfaces. Many were made in state-run workshops that mass-produced pieces from molds. Their ceramics came in a variety of forms and decorative styles and displayed myths and ritual motifs as well. Notable among these earthenware forms were the so-called “portrait bottles”, bottles molded with the face of a well-known Moche figure. These highly detailed facial portraits reflect the Moche’s own use of face paint and/or tattoos, as well as elaborate headdresses. This portrait-making expertise can also be observed in everyday scenes and erotic representations, as well as in figures of individuals that were hunch backed, blind, or suffered from other disorders. They were skillful metalworkers, using gold, copper and silver to make ear ornaments, nose rings, bracelets, necklace beads, tweezers and a variety of tools. Especially notable is the tumi or ceremonial knife that was usually only carried by Moche officials.
Moche ceramics provide detailed representations of the culture’s supernatural world, including deities, myths, sacred animals and ceremonial practices. Their deities take the form of foxes, owls, hummingbirds, falcons and felines. These figures were servants of greater gods that had human form and sported elaborate outfits and ferocious faces with crossed fangs.
Tombs of important Moche individuals were rectangular and made of adobe, with niches for offerings. Some bodies were laid on cane mats, while others were left in caves inside cane coffins. People of the elite class were buried with metal masks and a rich array of grave goods, servants and animals accompanying them. The famous “Lord of Sipán” is the most notable example of this kind of burial.
卖家故事
详细资料
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卖家已就文件要求收到了Catawiki的通知并保证以下内容: - 该物品是合法获得的, - 卖家有权出售和/或出口该物品(如适用), - 卖家将提供必要的出处或来源地信息,并根据当地法律安排所需的文件和许可证/执照, - 如果在获取许可证/执照方面出现任何延误,卖家将通知买家。 出价竞投,表明您知晓根据您居住的国家和地区可能会被需要提供进口文件,以及获得许可证/执照可能会导致物品交付的延迟。
卖家已就文件要求收到了Catawiki的通知并保证以下内容: - 该物品是合法获得的, - 卖家有权出售和/或出口该物品(如适用), - 卖家将提供必要的出处或来源地信息,并根据当地法律安排所需的文件和许可证/执照, - 如果在获取许可证/执照方面出现任何延误,卖家将通知买家。 出价竞投,表明您知晓根据您居住的国家和地区可能会被需要提供进口文件,以及获得许可证/执照可能会导致物品交付的延迟。

