Artwork Page for Mummy Bundle "Mask"

Details / Information for Mummy Bundle "Mask"

Mummy Bundle "Mask"

400–200 BCE
Measurements
Overall: 103.5 x 40 cm (40 3/4 x 15 3/4 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

These masks fall into two categories, those with only a face and those with a full-bodied figure.

Description

The Paracas people buried their dead in bundles that they created by carefully wrapping the seated human body in layers of garments and other textiles. In some cases, they placed a painted
cloth—such as these examples—on the outer layer and at the top of the bundle. The hair-like
yarns (unwoven warps) were arranged around a solid cotton disk that was sometimes wrapped
with a headband. The cloths, then, seem to have functioned as the bundle’s head, even though
some are painted not with faces but with complete figures whose supernatural character is marked by the appendages streaming from their bodies.
A tan cotton bag laid out with a rectangular panel features figures rendered in brown pigment. A central two-headed figure with large circular eyes and wide mouths is surrounded by four smaller heads at the corners. Zigzag lines frame the scene. A long strap made of bundled, loose threads extends from the top edge. The textile has a coarse weave and a monochromatic, sandy-brown color palette.

Mummy Bundle "Mask"

400–200 BCE

Peru, South Coast, Ica Valley, Ocucaje site, Paracas style (700 BCE–1 CE)

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