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Andean Four-Cornered Hats, Ancient Volumes

Andean Four-Cornered Hats, Ancient Volumes

Jones, Julie
1990
34 pages
8.25 x 8.75 in
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The Andean hats are fabric caps with square tops that are punctuated with a peak at each corner. These ancient works of art, many of which remain intact, attracted Arthur Bullowa's attention many years ago. Their remarkably well-preserved condition offers the opportunity to discuss the complexity of Andean thought as it is demonstrated by the textile medium, a medium of consummate importance to the ancient peoples of the Andes. The three-dimensionality of these hats distinguishes them from other Andean fabrics and invites the insight into Andean spatial concepts that Ms. Frame details here. The brightly decorated colored patterns worked with such care can in fact be read both linearly and volumetrically, an accomplishment that demands attention and respect.

Four-Cornered Hat, Camelid fiber, Wari
Wari
500–900 CE
Tunic Fragment, Camelid hair, cotton, Wari
Wari
7th–9th century
Four-Cornered Hat, Camelid hair, Wari
Wari
8th–10th century
Four-Cornered Hat, Camelid hair, Wari
Wari
7th–9th century
Four-Cornered Hat, Camelid hair, Wari
Wari
7th–9th century
Four-Cornered Hat, Camelid hair, Wari
Wari
7th–9th century

View Citations

Frame, Mary, and Julie Jones. 1990. Andean Four-Cornered Hats: Ancient Volumes: From the Collection of Arthur M. Bullowa. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art.