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South America - Colombia
Quimbaya (Cuaca Medio)
Gold & Metals Exhibit |
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The mid-Cauca
region was inhabited for two thousand years before the Conquest by farmers,
gold and salt miners, potters and goldsmiths. The goldwork of the Early
Period (500 B.C. to 600 A.D.) consists of iconic figures of leaders, both
men and women, as symbols of identity. The colors and shine, and the
pumpkin, marrow, gourd and female shapes, all referred to fertility. One
notable object is a poporo, or lime container, in the shape of a
high-ranking woman in a ritual position.
Major changes
occurred in the Late Period (800 to 1600 A.D.), when there was great
cultural diversity and an increase in the population. The body was painted,
bead ligatures were tied to the limbs, and ornaments were inserted in the
nose and under the mouth. Goldwork, in which much copper was used, and
pottery became geometric and schematic. Chieftains looked like jaguar-men,
frog-men and lizard-men, with their ornaments and paint. Around 1540,
Europeans classified the indigenous groups in 'provinces', based on their
different customs and languages: Caramanta, Anserma, Arma, Picara, Carrapa,
Quimbaya, Quindo, and others. Most of these were wiped out in the Conquest. |
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Quimbaya Figures with beaten gold ear and nose
rings
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Quimbaya Zoomorphic
Zoomorphic design depicting an
animalistic shape or design |
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Animal-Headed Figure Pendant
Quimbaya or Yotoco
Colombia
5th-10th Century
The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection |
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Animal-Headed Figure Pendant
Quimbaya or Yotoco
Colombia
1st-8th century
The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection |
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Quimbaya Zoomorphic Pendant
Columbian
Gold Museum
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Quimbaya Zoomorphic Pendant
From Salento, Quindío. Alto: 3 cm.
Columbian
Gold Museum
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Darien
Probably Atrato Valley, Colombia
Pendant
Cast gold
H. 5" (12.8 cm); W. 3 7/8" (9.9 cm)
Dumbarton Oaks Collection |
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Quimbaya Animals
Other animal designs depicting specific
animal
designs or motifs |
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Necklace of Insect Beads
Malagana region
Colombia
4th century BC - 4th century AD
The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection |
We are looking for more
outstanding examples of Central American Gold!
Would you like to add to our
virtual museum?
send us an email to:
wesayso @
mcguinnessonline .
com |
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Various
types of Quimbaya gold object, such as ornaments, lime-flasks, trumpets and
helmets, featured human figures. Men and women are both represented, usually
naked except for adornments such as necklace, earrings, diadem, nose
ornaments and leg bands.
The Quimbaya used innovative metalworking techniques to
produce outstanding pieces. They cast most objects not in pure gold but in
an alloy of gold and copper, called tumbaga, which offers a great
advantage in the casting process since it has a lower melting point than
purer metals. Silver, also present in the alloy, occurs naturally in some
gold deposits and was not added intentionally.
However, the composition of the alloy may not have been
chosen for its technical properties alone. Depending on the purity of gold
or the amount of copper added, tumbaga shows a wide range of color.
The different hues obtained probably had symbolic values among the ancient
cultures of present-day Colombia. Many of the coppery-colored tumbaga
castings were then gilded and burnished to restore their golden appearance.
This process would also have helped to avoid superficial oxidation and
corrosion, enhancing their durability. |
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Quimbaya
Human/Shamanistic/Demonistic
Shamanistic or
Demonistic designs depicting a shaman
dressed in mask or costume or a demonistic figure |
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Cast gold socket with
human couple -
Quimbaya, AD 600-1100
From Colombia
Height: 11.5 cm
Here a woman and a man stand
back to back on the cylindrical socket. |
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Quimbaya Tumbaga
Figure Pendant
Dated (AD 600-1000)
Art & Antiquities Dealer [1]
click photos
to
enlarge |
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Quimbaya Tumbaga
Figure Pendant Front & Back
From "Pueblo del Muerto" Armenia, Quindío (de la colección de Santiago Vélez).
Alto: 4,8 cm. |
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Cauca. Ca.350 B.C.—A.D. 100. Gold - 22 5/8" h.
Private Collection |
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Cauca. Ca. 350 B.C.—A.D. 100. Gold 1 5/16" h. (49.2 mm)
Private Collection
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Cauca. Ca. 350 B.C.—A.D. 100. Gold.1 1/8" H.
Private Collection
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Cauca. Ca. 350 B.C.—A.D. 100.
Gold. 2-1/16" (26.98 mm) H.
Private Collection
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Gold Ceremonial Tweezers
- Quimbaya
900-1100 7 1/4 in. (18.4 cm)
Walters Art Museum |
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click photos
to
enlarge |
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Quimbaya Ornamental Objects
Ornamental designs or motifs
without animal or human characteristics |
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Nose Ring Ornament
Quimbaya
West-central Colombia
5th-10th Century
The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection |
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Necklace Figurine Bead
Colombia
1st-8th century
The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection |
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Nose Ornaments
Sinú & Quimbaya
Colombia
5th-11th century
The Cleveland Museum of Art Collection |

The thin
sheet was worked by repeated hammering combined with a process called
annealing, which entails heating the metal and cooling it with water before
hammering again. Tumbaga, an alloy of gold and copper, becomes
brittle and hard to work if it is hammered continuously without annealing.
The
embossed design on this helmet of a naked female with upraised arms
parallels similar figures on gold lime-flasks.
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Hammered and embossed gold helmet -
Quimbaya,
AD 600-1100
From Colombia Height:
11.3 cm
Diameter: 20.4 cm
Two combined
techniques were used to fashioned this helmet: hammering and embossing. Gold
granules and nuggets, found in sands and gravels from river beds, were
beaten into flat, thin sheets. Sixteenth-century Spanish chroniclers
describe hammers made of very hard stone used by Pre-Columbian metal smiths.
British Museum Collection
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Laminate Pectoral
A.D. 900 - A.D. 1600
- 14,1 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum
click photos
to
enlarge |
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Laminate Pectoral
A.D. 900 - A.D. 1600
- Montenegro, Quindío - 17,5 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum
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Gold Ear Rings
Período Tardío (900 A.D. - 1600 A.D.) La Tebaida, Quindío
7 x 16 cm & 8 x 14 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Helmet
0 - A.D. 600 -
Puerto Nare, Antioquia - 11,2 x 19,1 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Gold Necklace Bead
0 - A.D. 600 - 2 x
1,7 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Pendant
0 - A.D. 600 -
Corinto, Cauca
10 x 6,4 x 2 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Copper Pectoral
Columbian
Gold Museum
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Gold disc pendant |

click photos
to
enlarge |
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A pectoral of tumbaga, of the Quimbaya
culture. 300-1600 AD.
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Quimbaya Lime Dippers & Flasks
Lime dipper staffs depicting a shaman
or zoomorphic figures and Lime Flasks in various designs
The cast gold lime-flasks made by the Quimbaya culture are wonderful
examples of the astonishing virtuosity achieved by pre-Columbian artisans.
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Lime Dipper with Standing
Shaman
Yotoco
A.D. 100 - 800
Gold, Weight 58 grams
Height 10 in. Width 13/16 in. Height (figure) 1 3/8 in.
The Hendershott Collection |
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Lime
Container (Poporo), 1st–7th century
Colombia; Quimbaya
Jan Mitchell and Sons Collection |

British Museum |
Cast
gold lime-flask of a standing male -
Quimbaya,
AD 600-1100
From Colombia Height:
30 cm
Such
flasks were used to hold lime, a substance chewed with coca leaves to
release their active stimulant. This example was cast by the lost-wax method
using tumbaga, an alloy of copper and less than 60% gold. The lower
legs were added in a second casting. Its surface was treated by depletion
gilding and then burnished. Depletion gilding consists of the removal (or
depletion) of copper, and sometimes silver, from the surface of a
copper-colored tumbaga object, giving the finishing appearance of a
much higher purity gold.
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Cast
gold lime-flask of a seated female -
Quimbaya,
AD 600-1100
From Colombia Height:
14.5 cm
This lime-flask was cast by the lost-wax method.
British Museum |
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Tumbaga Lime Flask
0 - A.D. 600
Pajarito hill, between
Angostura and Yarumal, Antioquia
23,5 x 11,4 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Lime Flask
0 - 600 A.D.
Puerto Nare, Antioquia
27,1 x 11,8 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Lime Flask
0 - A.D. 600
Pueblorrico, Risaralda
24 x 11,8 x 7,2 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Containers With
Lids
0 - A.D. 600
Puerto Nare, Antioquia
29,3 x 13,4 cm & 21,4 x 10,5 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Lime Flask
0 - 600 A.D.
Tarazá, Antioquia
24,5 x 7,2 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Lime Flask
0 - A.D. 600
Filandia, Quindío
11 x 9,5 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Tumbaga Lime Flask
0 - A.D. 600
Roldanillo, Valle del Cauca
16,7 x 8,6 cm
Columbian
Gold Museum |
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Quimbaya Masks
Cast, Beaten, and Laminate gold
masks |

British Museum Collection |
Gold
funerary mask -
Quimbaya,
AD 600-1100 - From Colombia - Height:
11.5 cm
This funerary
mask, cast in the classic form of the Quimbaya style, represents a person
with filed teeth and wearing a nose ornament. In common with many Quimbaya
figures in gold, the eyes on this mask appear closed. This may be used as a
visual device to give the idea that the gaze is not directed outward to the
visible world, but rather focused on the spirit realm and the sources of
natural inspiration. |

click photos
to
enlarge |
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Gold mask , Cauca valley region, Ca. 350B.C.—A.D.100 . Fashioned from
hammered high alloy
sheet gold - the centered headdress is richly decorated with repose
Private Collection
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Quimbaya Utility Objects
Cast, Beaten, and Laminate gold
masks |
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Gold Cuaca Fish Hooks |
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The
ancient cultures of present-day Colombia used a variety of metalworking
techniques, such as hammering, casting and gilding. The Quimbaya culture
developed in the central valley of the Cauca River, in south-western
Colombia. Quimbaya metalwork is renowned for the use of the lost-wax method
of casting. In this process, a clay and charcoal core is fully modeled in
the round and then covered with a layer of beeswax and the details of the
finished object are added in wax. A clay mould is then applied over the wax.
When heated, the wax melts and the molten metal is poured into the mould.
This method was used to produce objects on a large scale.
For many
Amerindian cultures the practice of enriching the surface appearance of gold
alloys used for body ornament and ritual regalia was motivated by the
symbolic significance of gold. Their perceptions and values differ
fundamentally from much of Western thought. Many of the surviving gold
artifacts reveal great sophistication in technology and design. The
reflective properties of the surface of the golden object was probably more
important than the purity of the gold itself. Indigenous people in
present-day Colombia believe that there is a reciprocal relationship between
the gold and the sun, in which energy is exchanged. |
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