Video: A Nazca textile fragment, possibly 500–600 CE Video: A Nazca single-spout-and-bridge bottle depicting a figure with human heads, 450–650 CE Video: A Nazca nose and mouth ornament, 200 BCE–500 CEĪudio: …hammered gold jewelry and ornaments… Video: A Nazca double-spout bottle with a flying figure, 300–500 CEĪudio: …such as detailed polychromatic ceramics… Video: An aerial view of the Nazca Lines featuring the monkeyĪudio: …the lines in the desert that form enormous images of animals and shapes, visible only from the sky.Īudio: But the Nazca also made impressive crafts at a smaller scale… Video: An aerial view of the Nazca Lines featuring the colibri, or hummingbirdĪudio: The Nazca are most commonly associated with… Video: A Nazca bird-shaped painted vessel, 100–700 CEĪudio: …and thus they determined agricultural abundance. Video: A Nazca tunic with confronting catfish, 800–850 CE Video: A ceramic canine bottle, 6th–7th century CE, from the Nazca/Wari culture Video: A Nazca ceramic drum vessel, 100–800 CEĪudio: The Nazca worshipped powerful gods of nature… Groups would travel to ceremonial centers for religious events and feasts, where they would celebrate and exchange luxury goods. Video: The desert around the ancient Nazca Chauchilla Cemetery, PeruĪudio: …in the first half of the first millennium Common Era…Īudio: …that the Nazca people were principally an agricultural society organized into family groups or chiefdoms. Video: An aerial shot of the Nazca Valley, PeruĪudio: The Nazca culture flourished on Peru’s south coast… Video: The coastline of the Paracas National Park in Peru Video: A map showing the area of Nazca influence, on the Pacific coast We do not know exactly where it was made, but the tunic’s design motif and…Īudio: …impressive state of preservation suggest that it is from the… Video: A portrait of a blue-and-yellow macaw in the Peruvian jungleĪudio: …were attached one by one to a plain-weave cotton underlayer using a hand-spun cotton thread.Īudio: Given the pristine condition of this textile, it is incredible to consider that it was likely made about a millennium and a half ago, between the fifth and seventh centuries of the Common Era, or around the years 400 and 600…Īudio: …a date determined by radiocarbon testing of the feathers. Video: A close-up view of the center of Feather TunicĪudio: The blue and red concentric rectangles in the center would have framed the wearer’s neck…Īudio: …adorning the front and back of the wearer’s body in thousands of brilliant, shimmering… Video: Thomas Campbell standing next to Feather TunicĪudio: …but it was once worn as a tunic by a high-ranking member of the Nazca people, a pre-Hispanic Andean society. Video: Thomas Campbell standing next to Feather TunicĪudio: We’ve set it up today for a special viewing for Masterpiece Moment, where you’ll have the rare opportunity to view it.Īudio: This beautiful textile is displayed flat, highlighting its striking geometric composition… To protect its condition, it is not often on display. Video: Feather Tunic, 400–600 CE, Nazca artistĪudio: This magnificent object is fragile and particularly sensitive to light. Today, I want to talk about one of my favorite works from our collection-a feathered tunic from ancient Peru housed at the de Young-and I want to tell you why I think it is truly a masterpiece. On-screen text: Thomas Campbell, Director and CEO, Fine Arts Museums of San FranciscoĪudio-Thomas Campbell: Hello, I’m Thomas Campbell, Director of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco-the de Young and the Legion of Honor. Welcome to Bank of America’s Masterpiece Moment. Video: Thomas Campbell, Director of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco – the de young and the Legion of Honor, standing next to Feather Tunic, 400-600 CE On-screen text: Feather Tunic, 400–600 CE, Nazca artist (ancient Peru), Feathers and cotton, 48 x 67 in. Video: Interior shots of the museum, landing on Feather Tunic, 400–600 CE, by a Nazca artist On-screen text: de Young Museum, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Video: An aerial shot of the de Young Museum, San Francisco, followed by a ground-level view Graphic: Bank of America presents Masterpiece Moment
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