On view

Art of the Ancient Americas

Sacrificial knife with finial depicting a human and feline,

600–800

Mochica
Early Intermediate Period
2009-129
Spear-throwers, which enhance the power behind hurled darts, were the primary ranged weapons used by the Mochica. The example displayed here, composed of a bronze substructure with brown and black stone inlay, was likely used only for ceremonial purposes. The addition of a feline atop the handle suggests parallels between war and the hunt, as does the small deer that likely served as the burl on another ceremonial spear-thrower. The same type of spear-thrower is wielded by the mythical wrinkly-faced man who faces an anthropomorphic jaguar on the finial of a blade used to pierce the jugular of sacrificial war captives. The same two mythical figures face off on an ornamental crescent-shaped object. Here, they engage in melee combat, with the wrinkly-faced man gripping the feline’s hair to take it captive.

More Context

Although traditionally interpreted as scepters or coca-snuffing "spatulas," chisel-shaped objects such as this more likely served as bloodletters in sacrificial rites. Made from a copper alloy, this piece is comprised of a flat blade, a short handle, and an elaborate finial presenting interaction between two supernatural characters. One is an anthropomorphic deity with a serpent-tail and a feline headdress. His left hand gestures toward the other figure, while the right wields an atlatl (spear-thrower) and a dart. He faces an anthropomorphic feline who wears a large back-rack with a pair of human heads dangling from the upper structure. In ceremony, Mochica actors would often don the costumes of deities; the feline and atlatl-wielder on this chisel are thus either the supernaturals themselves or the ritual practitioners in costume. Presumably, these chisels were used to pierce the jugular of a sacrificial victim; the blood was then collected in a cup or bowl for offertory consumption before the victim was decapitated.

More About This Object

Information

Title
Sacrificial knife with finial depicting a human and feline
Dates

600–800

Medium
Bronze
Dimensions
27.3 × 7.6 × 4.4 cm (10 3/4 × 3 × 1 3/4 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Fowler McCormick, Class of 1921, Fund
Object Number
2009-129
Place Made

South America, Peru, North coast

Culture
Materials
Techniques

Said to have been purchased from Louis Slavitz (1907-1992; dealer), New York [1]; by 1969, Sue and John Tishman collection, New York [2]; passed to Sue Tishman (-2005); passed to her estate; March 2007, purchased by the David Bernstein Fine Art, New York (M7050) [3]; October 13, 2009, sold to the Princeton University Art Museum.

Notes:
[1] According to personal communication between David Bernstein, Robert Sonin, and Bryan Just, 2009. It was also said this purchase was on the advice of Junius Bird.
[2] This object was included in the 1969 exhibition Pre-Columbian Art in New York: Selections from Private Collections, The Museum of Primitive Art, New York, cat. no. 249, loaned by Mr. and Mrs. John Tishman.
[3] According to correspondence dated November 6, 2008, between John L. Tishman and David Bernstein