Shirt

500–850 CE
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 363
Throughout Peruvian prehistory, the tunic was the most elaborate garment worn by men. In addition to being important items of dress, tunics are significant for their technical variety and their great wealth of complex patterning.

This example is strikingly bold in color. The main pattern, worked in red, represents interconnected, geometricized animals, whose serrated backs form strong diagonals across the body of the shirt. A border at the lower edge of the tunic (and originally at the sleeve ends as well), repeats a much smaller profile figure at regular intervals. Its long upraised tail has monkey references, but its long snout suggests that it is a composite animal. Such change of scale and the stylization of imagery from the center to the borders was common to textiles associated with the Huarmey Valley at this time. This variety was stimulated by external political and artistic forces as new influences moved into the area.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Shirt
  • Artist: Moche artist(s)
  • Date: 500–850 CE
  • Geography: Peru, Huarmey Valley(?)
  • Culture: Moche
  • Medium: Camelid hair, cotton
  • Dimensions: H. 34 1/4 x W. 58 in. (87 x 147.3 cm)
  • Classification: Textiles-Woven
  • Credit Line: Bequest of Jane Costello Goldberg, from the Collection of Arnold I. Goldberg, 1986
  • Object Number: 1987.394.706
  • Curatorial Department: The Michael C. Rockefeller Wing

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