Power and Metals: Regalia of the Moche of Ancient Perú Art Matters Lecture with Alicia Boswell (in person)
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Alicia Boswell Assistant Professor, History of Art and Architecture, University of California, Santa Barbara In the ancient Andes, metallurgical technology was driven by an ideological system that imbued metals with sacred properties. Unlike Old World societies, where metallurgical technology developed in response to the demand for utilitarian goods, in the ancient Andes, gold, silver, and copper alloys were used to create regalia worn by elites. These objects lended authority and power to those that wore them—in life and death. This lecture discusses the role of regalia in the Moche world, a society that thrived on what today is the north coast of Peru in the first millennium. Image:Funerary Mask. About 100-700 CE. Moche, Peru. Copper alloy, bone, muscovite. SBMA, Gift of Wright S. Ludington, 1960.2.
Location
Santa Barbara Museum of Art
1130 State St
Date and Time for this Past Event
- Thursday, Dec 2, 2021 5:30 pm
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