Artwork Page for Half of a Sleeved Tunic

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Half of a Sleeved Tunic

c. 500–1000
Measurements
Overall: 88.6 x 101.9 cm (34 7/8 x 40 1/8 in.)
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view

Description

The bird-headed creature in profile that repeats in each of this tunic's design fields gazes upward, holds a staff of authority in front of its body, and wears an ornate headdress behind which a three-feathered wing can be seen. The extremely high technical quality of such tunics suggests that the Wari reserved bird imagery for their most exalted rulers. Here, the original incorporated more than twice as much yarn as the routine--some 19 miles, all handmade and much dyed an inky, dark blue, the most prestigious of Wari colors.
A rectangular cotton and camelid fiber textile fragment features three vertical bands and one partial strip against a dark blue background. Columns of repeating geometric motifs in muted red, yellow, green, and tan incorporate small circles and are framed by thin red borders. These figures appear as highly stylized, angular abstractions. The piece displays significant wear, with a jagged left edge and frayed top and bottom boundaries.

Half of a Sleeved Tunic

c. 500–1000

Central Andes, Middle Horizon, Wari, 6th-11th century

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