Chapter 26: Art of the Americas

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Ashlar masonry

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Ashlar masonry

carefully cut and grooved stones that support a building without the use of concrete or other kinds of masonry

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Bandolier bag

a large heavily beaded pouch with a slit on top worn at the waist with a strap over the shoulders

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Chacmool

a Mayan figure that is half-sitting and half-lying on his back

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Corbel arch

a vault formed by layers of stone that gradually grow closer together as they rise and eventually meet

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Coyolxauhqui

an Aztec moon goddess whose name means “Golden Bells”

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Huitzilopochtli

an Aztec god of the sun and war; sometimes represented as an eagle or as a hummingbird

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Kiva

a circular room wholly or partly underground used for religious rites

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Potlatch

a ceremonial feast among northwest coast American Indians in which a host demonstrates his or her generosity by bestowing gifts

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Pueblo

a communal village of flat-roofed structures of many stories that are stacked in terraces; made of stone or adobe

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Relief sculpture

a sculpture that projects from a flat background

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Repoussé

(French, meaning “to push back”) a type of metal relief sculpture in which the back side of a plate is hammered to form a raised relief on the front

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Roof comb

a wall rising from the center ridge of a building to give the appearance of greater height

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Teepee

a portable Indian home made of stretched hides placed over wooden poles

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Tlaloc

ancient American god who was highly revered; associated with rain, agriculture, and war

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T’oqapu

small rectangular shapes in an Inkan garment

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Transformation mask

A mask worn in ceremonies by people of the Pacific Northwest, Canada, or Alaska. The chief feature of the mask is its ability to open and close, going from a bird-like exterior to a human-faced interior

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Chavín

a civilization in coastal Peru named after its main archaeological site.

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Anasazi culture

The ______ was referred to as "ancient ones" or "ancient enemies" in Navajo language.

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Anasazi

the name used for ancient puebloans known for their detailed pueblos made of local materials.

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Aztec art

It is best known for its abundance of gold jewelry, as well as intricately carved jade and turquoise pieces.

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Inkan

________ architecture is remarkable for constructing cities in extremely challenging locations.

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<p>Chavín de Huántar</p>
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<p>Chavín de Huántar</p>

Chavín de Huántar

  • A religious capital.

  • Temple, 60 meters tall, was adorned with a jaguar sculpture, a symbol of power.

  • Hidden entrance to the temple led to stone corridors.

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<p>Lanzón Stone</p>
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<p>Lanzón Stone</p>

Lanzón Stone

  • Served as a cult figure; Center of pilgrimage

  • 15 feet tall.

  • 900–200 B.C.E. (Peru)

  • Head of snakes and a face of a jaguar.

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<p>Nose ornament</p>
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<p>Nose ornament</p>

Nose ornament

  • Elite men and women wore these as emblems of their ties to the religion and eventually were buried with them.

  • Held in place by the semicircular section at the top.

  • A hammered gold alloy

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Yaxchilán

  • Found in Chiapas, Mexico

  • City set on a high terrace; plaza surrounded by important buildings.

  • Flourished c. 300–800 C.E.

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Structure 40, Yaxchilán

  • Built by ruler Bird Jaguar IV for his son, who dedicated it to him.

  • Roof remains nearly intact, with a large roof comb (ornamented stone tops on roofs).

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<p>Lintel 25, Structure 33, Yaxchilán</p>
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<p>Lintel 25, Structure 33, Yaxchilán</p>

Lintel 25, Structure 33, Yaxchilán

  • Roof remains nearly intact, with a large roof comb (ornamented stone tops on roofs).

  • originally set above the central doorway of Structure 23 as a part of a series of three lintels.

  • intended to relay a message of the refoundation of the site

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<p>Structure 33, Yaxchilán</p>
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<p>Structure 33, Yaxchilán</p>

Structure 33, Yaxchilán

  • Restored temple structure.

  • Remains of roof comb with perforations.

  • Three central doorways lead to a large single room.

  • Corbel arch interior.

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<p>Mesa Verde cliff dwellings</p>
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<p>Mesa Verde cliff dwellings</p>

Mesa Verde cliff dwellings

  • The top ledge houses supplies in a storage area; cool and dry area out of the way; accessible only by ladder.

  • The pueblo was built into the sides of a cliff, housed about one hundred people.

  • Inhabited for two hundred years; probably abandoned when the water source dried up.

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<p>Great Serpent Mound</p>
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<p>Great Serpent Mound</p>

Great Serpent Mound

  • Many mounds were enlarged and changed over the years, not built in one campaign.

  • Effigy mounds popular in Mississippian culture.

  • Associated with snakes and crop fertility.

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<p>Templo Mayor (Main Temple)</p>
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<p>Templo Mayor (Main Temple)</p>

Templo Mayor (Main Temple)

  • Pyramids built one atop the other so that the final form encases all previous pyramids; seven building campaigns.

  • destruction and reuse of its stones by the Spanish asserted a political and spiritual dominance over the conquered civilization.

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<p>Coyolxauhqui</p>
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<p>Coyolxauhqui</p>

Coyolxauhqui

  • Circular relief sculpture.

  • Once brilliantly painted.

  • So called because of the bells she wears as earrings.

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<p>Calendar Stone</p>
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<p>Calendar Stone</p>

Calendar Stone

  • Circular shape reflects the cyclic nature of time.

  • Two calendar systems, separate but intertwined.

  • Calendars synced every fifty-two years in a time of danger, when the Aztecs felt a human sacrifice could ensure survival.

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<p>Olmec-style mask</p>
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<p>Olmec-style mask</p>

Olmec-style mask

  • Found on the site; actually a much older work executed by the Olmecs.

  • Made of jadeite.

  • Shows that the Aztecs collected and embraced artwork from other cultures

  • Shows that the Aztecs had a wide-ranging merchant network that traded historical items.

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<p>Ruler’s feather headdress</p>
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<p>Ruler’s feather headdress</p>

Ruler’s feather headdress

  • Only known Aztec feather headdress in the world.

  • Headdress possibly part of a collection of artifacts given by Motechuzoma

  • Made from 400 long green feathers

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<p>Maize cobs</p>
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<p>Maize cobs</p>

Maize cobs

  • Repoussé technique.

  • May have been part of a garden in which full-sized metal sculptures of plants and other items were put in place alongside actual plants in the Qorinkancha garden.

  • was celebrated by having sculptures fashioned out of sheet metal.

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<p>City of Cusco</p>
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<p>City of Cusco</p>

City of Cusco

  • In the shape of the puma, a royal animal.

  • Modern plaza is in the place where the puma’s belly would be.

  • Head, a fortress; heart, a central square.

  • Historic capital of the Inka Empire.

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<p>Qorikancha</p>
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<p>Qorikancha</p>

Qorikancha

  • Once was an observatory for priests to chart the skies.

  • placed at the convergence of the four main highways and connected to the four districts of the empire;

  • the temple cemented the symbolic importance of religion

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<p>Walls at Saqsa Waman (Sacsayhuaman)</p>
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<p>Walls at Saqsa Waman (Sacsayhuaman)</p>

Walls at Saqsa Waman (Sacsayhuaman)

  • Ashlar masonry.

  • Ramparts contain stones weighing up to seventy tons, brought from a quarry two miles away.

  • Complex outside the city of Cusco, Peru, at the head of the puma-shaped plan of the city.

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<p>Machu Picchu</p>
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<p>Machu Picchu</p>

Machu Picchu

  • Buildings built of stone with perfectly carved rock rendered in precise shapes and grooved together; thatched roofs.

  • Originally functioned as a royal retreat.

  • The estate of fifteenth-century Inkan rulers.

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<p>Observatory in Machu Picchu</p>
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<p>Observatory in Machu Picchu</p>

Observatory in Machu Picchu

  • Highest point at Machu Picchu.

  • Used to chart the sun’s movements; also known as the Temple of the Sun.

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<p>Intihuatana Stone in Machu Picchu</p>
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<p>Intihuatana Stone in Machu Picchu</p>

Intihuatana Stone in Machu Picchu

  • aligns with the sun at the spring and the autumn equinoxes, when the sun stands directly over the pillar and thus creates no shadow.

  • Inkan ceremonies held in concert with this event.

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<p>All-T’oqapu tunic</p>
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<p>All-T’oqapu tunic</p>

All-T’oqapu tunic

  • Wearing such an elaborate garment indicates the status of the individual.

  • May have been worn by an Inkan ruler.

  • Exhibits Inkan preference for abstract designs, standardization of designs, and an expression of unity and order.

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<p>Bandolier bag</p>
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<p>Bandolier bag</p>

Bandolier bag

  • It was made for men and women; objects of prestige.

  • Functional and beautiful; acted also as a status symbol as part of an ­elaborate garb.

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<p>Transformation mask</p>
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<p>Transformation mask</p>

Transformation mask

  • The mask has a birdlike exterior face; when opened, it reveals a second human face on the interior.

  • The masks were worn by native people of the Pacific.

  • During a ritual performance, the wearer opens and closes the transformation mask using strings.

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<p>Hide Painting of the Sun Dance</p>
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<p>Hide Painting of the Sun Dance</p>

Hide Painting of the Sun Dance

  • Depicts traditional aspects of the Plains people’s culture that were nostalgic rather than practical

  • Worn as a robe over the shoulders of the warrior.

  • Depicts biographical details; personal accomplishments; heroism; battles.

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<p>Black-on-black ceramic vessel</p>
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<p>Black-on-black ceramic vessel</p>

Black-on-black ceramic vessel

  • By Maria Martínez and Julian Martínez

  • Black-on-black vessel; Contrasting shiny black and matte black finishes.

  • Comes from the thousand-year-old tradition of pottery making in the Southwest.

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