
Cleveland Museum of Art
plug for the bottom of Container in the form of a Sacrificer
- Date
- 770–890 (radiocarbon date, 95% probability)
- Medium
- wood and red pigment (cinnabar)
- Culture
- Peru, Middle Horizon, Wari Culture, 7th -11th century
- Department
- Art of the Americas
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
This plug is on the bottom of a container that assumes the shape of a magnificent, feline-headed, supernatural sacrificer who draws a knife across the throat of the human it holds in its lap. Severed human heads hang from the feline's belt and dangle by the trachea at the back of its headdress. Sacrifice had a place in Wari religious practice, probably as an unusual and exceptionally precious offering made to entice the benevolence of cosmic forces. Indeed, colonial-period Andean people believed that death was a prerequisite for the renewal of the world. Traces of cinnabar, a toxic mercuric sulfide, are visible on the container's surface.
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