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Shipibo Vessel

Unknown1933/1934

Museo Nacional de Antropología, Madrid

Museo Nacional de Antropología, Madrid
Madrid, Spain

Globular vessel with a high neck, and the upper half decorated in black geometric designs against a cream background. The rest of the jar is of a reddish color with no decoration. This type of jar is used to hold water and "masato" (a weak liquor made by fermenting the cassava plant). “Masato” is prepared by women in large quantities for social events and rituals. The designs on this ceramic object are related to the Shipibo world view, and in their view, the designs are "quené" (signs of ethnic identity). Shipibo ceramic is one of the most beautiful of the Amazon, and nowadays it is in great commercial demand. The sale of ceramics is the biggest source of income for the Shipibo, along with textiles and jewelry, all of which are made by women.

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  • Title: Shipibo Vessel
  • Creator: Unknown
  • Date Created: 1933/1934
  • Physical Dimensions: Ø39 x h27 cm
  • Provenance: Collected by Captain Francisco Iglesias Brage (1900-1973), in his voyage through the Amazon from June 1933 to March 1934. Iglesias was appointed delegate of the League of Nations and tasked with running the Leticia Triangle, an Amazonian region where the borders of Brazil, Peru, and Colombia meet, as there were issues with the border between Colombia and Peru. He took the stay as an opportunity to collect various objects from different Amazonian cultures. His collection was exhibited at the Iglesias Exposition of Amazonian Ethnography in Madrid in 1935.
  • Type: Ceramics
  • External Link: CERES
  • Photographer: Pablo Linés Viñuales, 2005
  • Materials: Clay, pigments, vegetable resin
  • Cultural Context: Shipibo (Amazon area), Ucayali (Peru)
Museo Nacional de Antropología, Madrid

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