Stirrup spout vessels

Stirrup-spout bottles (the name refers to the spout shape, which resembles a riding saddle stirrup) were made for ritual use beginning in the early second millennium B.C. Large numbers of them have been found in elite burials on Peru's northern coast and display unequalled technical and artistic skill. Many are elaborated into three-dimensional sculptures, including humans, plants, animals, and supernatural beings; others show a wide range of surface texturing. The majority of the bottles are a monochrome gray-to-brown black color resulting from firing in a reducing atmosphere. The uneven exposure to fire and air left the surface on this vessel with an irregular dark hue. The profile face of a creature, perhaps a feline, is incised into the well-burnished surface of the globular chamber. An excessively long streamer or tongue projects from the mouth to the bottom of the vessel, and a wide-open eye stares menacingly from under a prominent, sweeping brow. Large felines, particularly jaguars, were important Cupisnique symbols and were frequently depicted on ritual ceramics and temple walls. As the largest and most feared predator in the American tropics, the jaguar was a natural symbol of power and aggression
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Stirrup Spout Vessel with Fineline Bird Motifs | The Art Institute of Chicago
Moche North coast, Peru Stirrup Spout Vessel with Fineline Bird Motifs, 100 B.C./A.D. 500
Stirrup Spout Vessel in the Form of a Feline
Peru. Moche. 100-500 A.D. Stirrup Spout Vessel in the Form of a Cat | LACMA Collections
Stirrup Spout Vessel in the Form of a Woman Laying on the Back of a Llama | The Art Institute of Chicago
Moche Chimbote, Santa Valley, north coast, Peru Stirrup Spout Vessel in the Form of a Woman Laying on the Back of a Llama, 100 B.C./A.D. 500
a small vase with a handle on it's head and an animal figurine in the middle

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Molded stirrup-spout vessel (1997-101)
Early Intermediate (Moche IV), Mochica Molded stirrup-spout vessel, A.D. 500–700 Ceramic with red and white slip h. 24.0 cm., w. 14.4 cm., d. 15.5 cm. (9 7/16 x 5 11/16 x 6 1/8 in.) Place made: North coast, Peru
Handle Spout Vessel in Form of Sacrificer Wearing a Jaguar Headdress | The Art Institute of Chicago
Handle Spout Vessel, Moche culture, North Coast, Peru; 100 B.C. / A.D. 500. The Art Institute of Chicago, Online Collection.
Seated figure stirrup spout vessel Chimu Peru 1200-1500 CE Ceramic
Seated figure stirrup spout vessel Chimu Peru 1200-1500 CE Ceramic
Pottery; Pre-Columbian, Chavin, Peru, Vessel, Stirrup-Spout, Feline Relief, Burnished & Slipped, 11 inch.
Pottery; Pre-Columbian, Chavin, Peru, Vessel, Stirrup-Spout, Feline Relief, Burnished & Slipped, 11 inch.
Lizard Stirrup Spout Jar | Chimú | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Lizard Stirrup Spout Jar
Moche sculptural stirrup spout bottle
Moche sculptural stirrup spout bottle
Stirrup spout vessel decorated with bird motif. Chicama valley. Harvard Peabody Museum.
Stirrup Spout Bottle | Moche | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Stirrup Spout Bottle Date: 2nd–5th century Geography: Peru Culture: Moche Medium: Ceramic Dimensions: Height 6-7/8 in. Classification: Ceramics-Containers
six different vases with designs on them in various shapes and sizes, including an animal head

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Typology of stirrup spout vessels. Moche culture, Peru. via Harvard Peabody Museum digital collection.