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Gods and Empire: Huari Ceremonial Textiles |
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Tunic, with side seams unsewn. Peru, Huari style. Found on the south coast, Palpa, ca. AD 850-950. The Textile Museum 91.351. Acquired by George Hewitt Myers in 1941.
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WASHINGTON, DC.- Gods and Empire: Huari Ceremonial Textiles, an exhibition featuring approximately 12 tapestry-woven objects drawn from the Museums extensive collection of Huari textiles, will be on view at The Textile Museum through January 15, 2006. The Huari Empire, which flourished in the 7th and 8th centuries, was based near the modern city of Ayacucho, Peru. The powerful empire conquered a vast area that includes most of the coast and highlands of what now constitutes Peru.
Gods and Empire: Huari Ceremonial Textiles will explore what textiles and other evidence can tell us about Huari religious practices. Textiles on display will include garments such as a mantle, headband and several tunics, as well as two non-garment textiles featuring a colorful and distinctive ceremonial iconography. The exhibition is curated by Ann Pollard Rowe, the Museums Curator of Western Hemisphere Collections. She has published articles on Huari style textiles, including mantles, and tunics depicting musicians, for The Textile Museum and for Dumbarton Oaks.
Archaeological evidence of the Huari Empire includes ceramics, found primarily in tombs, with Huari secular designs or religious iconography. Textile preservation is rare in the highlands because of seasonal rainfall. However, because the Huari Empire conquered such a vast area, fine tapestry-woven textiles with designs similar to those found on Huari ceramics have been found in the coastal desert. The Textile Museum is fortunate to possess an outstanding collection of these Huari style textiles.
Archaeological evidence of offering deposits of smashed ceramics and of the brewing of large quantities of corn beer, perhaps laced with a hallucinogenic substance, suggest some aspects of Huari religious ritual. (The seeds of the Anadenanthera colubrina plant contain a hallucinogen known to have been in use during the time of the Huari Empire.) The iconography shared by Huari ceramics and textiles includes a deity with a rayed face and attendant staffbearing, winged figures. Textiles depicting fire-making using a fire drill and others depicting musicians, including men with panpipes, a deer-headed trumpet, or a whistle, and women beating drums, suggest other aspects of Huari ceremonial practice. The textiles themselves seem likely to have been used in such a ritual context.
Gods and Empire will feature a spectacular large textile measuring eight feet in length and two feet high, with repeating sections depicting a rayed deity head, staff-bearing, winged figures and a scene of two men making fire with a fire drill. The fragmentary textile was given to The Textile Museum in 2002 and then painstakingly reassembled by the Museums Conservation department. A full-scale reconstruction, depicting what the textile may have looked like when originally created, will be exhibited alongside the conserved fragment. It is clear from its non-garment format and from the representation of the principal Huari deities that the textile must have had some ritual use, perhaps display or sacrifice or some combination of the two.
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