Pre-Columbian, Peru, Chancay, ca. 1000 to 1200 CE. A large bichrome pottery amphora of an egg-shaped form used for storing and transporting chicha de jora (fermented corn beer), skillfully modeled and decorated in chocolate brown on cream with a myriad of beautiful geometric motifs inspired by woven textile patterns embellishing the body, neck, and rim - and perhaps most charming, a petite jaguar lying prone and adorning the neck, its head and front legs on one side and its tail and rear legs on the other. Size: 12" W x 19" H (30.5 cm x 48.3 cm)
The Chancay people were exceptional ceramic and textile artisans, and archaeologists have often found vessels like this example in the tombs of Chancay nobility. Chancay artisans created ceramics that are quite distinctive in form and decoration - finely painted and molded with specific decorative details carefully added by hand - as we see in this example. The Chancay replaced the Wari, were contemporaries of the Inca, and in their latter period came under Inca influence. Their goods were traded throughout the Andean region.
Compare with similar examples in "Ancestors of the Incas, The Lost Civilizations of Peru" by Kauffmann-Doig, Presented by Wonders, 124/125.
This piece has been searched against the Art Loss Register database and has been cleared. The Art Loss Register maintains the worldÂ’s largest database of stolen art, collectibles, and antiques.
Provenance: ex-Zena Kruzik Tribal Art, Richmond, California, USA; ex-private Kansas City, Missouri, USA collection, before 2000
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#164073
Condition
Because of the large size, the vessel was slightly misfired resulting in the droopy rim and depressions to the body as shown in the photos. One small rim chip, surface spall and minor pigment wear but no repairs or restoration as is so often seen on these huge vessels. Old collection label and several inventory numbers penned in ink on the base.