
Cleveland Museum of Art
Ornament from Sitio Conte: Small Plaque
- Date
- c. 400–500
- Medium
- hammered gold
- Culture
- Panama, Conte style, 5th - 10th century
- Department
- Art of the Americas
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
Harvard archaeologists excavated this and seven other ornaments from several burials at Sitio Conte, a cemetery famous for its lavish graves of powerful chieftains. The young man buried in Grave 26 was such a chief. His status was stunningly memorialized by 21 human companions and 475 objects, many of them personal ornaments made of gold, including this large chest plaque and a rod-shaped ear ornament. The creature on the chest plaque, found close to the chief’s body, has reptile claws and perhaps the head crest of an iguana. Its meaning is unknown but perhaps, as in later periods, reptilian imagery and the warm gleam of gold linked rulers with the sun’s creative force.
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.

Ornament from Sitio Conte: Animal Pendant(?)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Spool
Cleveland Museum of Art

Pectoral (Chest Plaque)
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ornament from Sitio Conte: Small Plaque
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Spool
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Spool
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Spool
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Rod
Cleveland Museum of Art

Plaque
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Ornament
Cleveland Museum of Art

Ear Ornament
Cleveland Museum of Art

Pair of Ear Ornaments
Cleveland Museum of Art