Stirrup Spout Bottle: Feline and Serpent 12th–5th century Cupisnique Jaguars were a favorite subject in the art of ancient Peru, and their strength and ferociousness made them an apt symbol of power. This ceramic bottle, made by artists of the Cupisnique culture (12th–5th centuries ), is a marvelous example of a rather lifelike image of a recumbent jaguar, identifiable by the circular spots on its body. The jaguar’s mouth is open, displaying its impressive canines—features that must have struck fear in any observer. The cat looks backwards, gazing upon a large anaconda slithering acro


Stirrup Spout Bottle: Feline and Serpent 12th–5th century Cupisnique Jaguars were a favorite subject in the art of ancient Peru, and their strength and ferociousness made them an apt symbol of power. This ceramic bottle, made by artists of the Cupisnique culture (12th–5th centuries ), is a marvelous example of a rather lifelike image of a recumbent jaguar, identifiable by the circular spots on its body. The jaguar’s mouth is open, displaying its impressive canines—features that must have struck fear in any observer. The cat looks backwards, gazing upon a large anaconda slithering across the top of the vessel and extending down the back. Four zoomorphic heads, shown in profile, were lightly incised on the shoulder of the vessel. The juxtaposition of these two powerful creatures—the jaguar and the anaconda—suggests a potential struggle between two animals that certainly ruled their respective domains. Jaguars and anacondas are primarily found in the Peruvian jungle, a habitat relatively distant from the coastal communities where this vessel was made. Two San Pedro cacti were modeled on either side of the vessel, near a stepped motif surmounted by a curled element. The San Pedro plant has hallucinogenic properties; ritual participants who ingested the substance may have perceived themselves transforming into one of several powerful animals such as a jaguar, anaconda, or harpy artists excelled in various media, including ceramics, stone, and gold. Jaguars, pumas, caimans, anacondas, and eagles were commonly represented, as were spiders, rodents, vegetal forms and, occasionally, humans and supernatural figures. The nature and extent of Cupisnique settlements and their relationships to coeval and later cultures such as Chavín and Moche, are the subject of ongoing archaeological investigations. This vessel is an early example of a stirrup-spout vessel—the shape of the spout recalls the stirrup on a horse's saddle—a much-favored fo


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Photo credit: © MET/BOT / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

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