Pre-Columbian - Ancient Pottery for Sale
Possibly first developed in Colombia or Ecuador, pottery succeeded baskets and gourds as containers in ancient times. Throughout the entire Pre-Columbian world, pottery became the most common surviving artifact. Both hand-modeled and molded pots and clay objects were made. Decoration involved incising designs, carving or molding reliefs, and employing various techniques of painting and polishing. Although polychromed ceramics were produced, most pottery was painted with one or two colors or left unpainted.
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Proto-Nazca Bridge-Spouted Vessel
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Rare type! Ancient Nazca (Proto-Nazca) polychrome vessel from Peru, ca. 100 BC – 100 A.D., clearly copying an earlier Paracas form. Chamber decorated with knotted...
$1,495.00
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Costa Rican Jade Bead Necklace
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Necklace comprised of 55 ancient beads -- 5 jade beads and 50 pottery beads -- in various forms and colors ranging from light green to white to gray. From Costa Rica, dating...
$275.00
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Jalisco Redware Bowl
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Ancient pottery bowl from western Mexico, probably the Jalisco area, dating between 200-500 A.D. Redware decorated on inside with four series of six vertical...
$195.00
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Proto-Mayan Seated Figure
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Early pottery figurine showing Olmec influence and dating between 200 B.C. and 200 A.D. Called Proto-Mayan as these figures were manufactured in the heart of Mayan territory...
$495.00
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Chavin Fish Stirrup, Anthropomorphic Face
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Rare! From the northern coast of Peru, Chavin culture, ca. 500 B.C. Ancient brownware pottery stirrup in the shape of a fish with an anthropomorphic face with round eyes/nose...
$1,995.00
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Pre-Columbian potters created many plain, functional pottery for common use, but they also formed elaborate and intricate art for religious use that required great skill to produce. They buried pottery with their dead to accompany them into the afterlife, thereby demonstrating the predominance of pottery in their culture and their skill at creating it to modern archeologists. In Pre-Columbian times, kilns were not used; pieces of pottery were fired in an open fire or a pit in the ground. Potters did not use any type of glaze, but they did burnish the surface of their pots with stones. Pots were decorated with gods, animals, plants, everyday scenes and geometric designs.