Vessel

31825

From: Peru | Northwest of the Town | Pachacamac

Curatorial Section: American

View All (7) Object Images

Object Number 31825
Current Location Collections Storage
Culture Chimu | Inca
Provenience Peru | Northwest of the Town | Pachacamac
Culture Area Andean
Period Late Chimu
Date Made 1476-1534 CE
Section American
Materials Ceramic
Iconography Monkey | Corn
Description

whistling double vessel; globular bodies, cylindrical neck with everted lip; straight bridge handle. Small monkey eating corn.

Narrow necked whistling vessel with a double-chambered globular body, hyperboloid neck, flattened rim, 1 bridge handle extending between the necks, and a flat base. There is a modeled/molded monkey sitting on top of one of the vessels eating a corn cob. There appears to be a burnished finish on the exterior. The vessel was likely fired in a reducing atmosphere as the surface is black and the interior is gray in color. There is a hole at the top of one chamber, possibly for a whistle. Evidence of usewear includes surface attrition on the bottom/base. The catalogue number is written on the object in black ink. Black ink on the bottom of the base reads: "3110).

Height 15.8 cm
Length 25 cm
Width 10.2 cm
Thickness 0.52 cm
Credit Line William Pepper Peruvian Expedition; Max Uhle, subscription of Phebe A. Hearst, 1897

Report problems and issues to digitalmedia@pennmuseum.org.