Skirt
A.D. 50–100
Object PlacePeru
Medium/TechniqueWool plain weave with stem-stitch embroidery; oblique interlacing; cross-knit loop-stitch (ties)
DimensionsSkirt: 50.8 x 289.8 cm (20 x 114 1/8 in.)
Ties: 8.8 x 101.5 cm (3 7/16 x 39 15/16 in.); 8.8 x 99 cm (3 7/16 x 39 in.)
Ties: 8.8 x 101.5 cm (3 7/16 x 39 15/16 in.); 8.8 x 99 cm (3 7/16 x 39 in.)
Credit LineDenman Waldo Ross Collection
Accession number16.30
On View
Not on viewClassificationsCostumes
Collections
ProvenanceOctober, 1915, sold by Enrique Mestanza, Pisco, Peru, to Julio C. Tello, Francisco Graña Reyes, and Gonzalo Carbajal, Lima [see note 1]; 1915/1916, sold by Julio Tello to Denman Waldo Ross (b. 1853 - d. 1935), Cambridge, MA [see note 2]; 1916, gift of Denman Waldo Ross to the MFA. (Accession Date: February 3, 1916)
NOTES:
[1] On the sale of the Mestanza collection, see Anne Paul, ed., Paracas: Art and Architecture (Iowa City, 1991), pp. 36-38 and Richard Daggett, A Tello-Centric History of Peruvian Archaeology part 2, pp. 360, 386-387. [2] Ross purchased a number of textiles and fragments from Tello (probably acting for Carbajal) between December 27, 1915 and January 8, 1916. When they were accessioned by the MFA (accession nos. 16.30-16.42), they were mistakenly believed to have been found by Tello himself "[in a cemetery] three or four miles south of Pisco."
NOTES:
[1] On the sale of the Mestanza collection, see Anne Paul, ed., Paracas: Art and Architecture (Iowa City, 1991), pp. 36-38 and Richard Daggett, A Tello-Centric History of Peruvian Archaeology part 2, pp. 360, 386-387. [2] Ross purchased a number of textiles and fragments from Tello (probably acting for Carbajal) between December 27, 1915 and January 8, 1916. When they were accessioned by the MFA (accession nos. 16.30-16.42), they were mistakenly believed to have been found by Tello himself "[in a cemetery] three or four miles south of Pisco."
200 B.C.–A.D. 200
1476–1534
A.D. 500–1476
18th century
A.D. 0–200
A.D. 1000–1476
1000–1476
about A.D. 300
A.D. 1000–1476
0–A.D. 100
100 B.C.–0
100 B.C.–A.D. 100