Mummy Bundle "Mask"

Cleveland Museum of Art

Mummy Bundle "Mask"

Date
200 BCE–1 CE
Medium
warp-faced cloth, painted: cotton
Culture
Peru, South Coast, Ica Valley, Ocucaje site, Paracas style (700 BCE–1 CE)
Department
Textiles
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

The Paracas people of Peru's South Coast buried their dead in pear-shaped mummy bundles made of a seated human body carefully wrapped in garments and other textiles. Sometimes a painted cloth was placed at the top of the bundle, as though it served as the bundle's face, head, or "mask." The cloth was padded on the back so it curved outward like a face, and the tress-like yarns (unwoven warps) at the upper edge were arranged around a solid cotton disk that, in turn, was wrapped with a headband. Some cloths were painted with mask-like faces, and others with full figures, apparently mythical creatures. These masks fall into two categories, those with only a face and those with a full-bodied figure.

The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.