Skip to main content
Zoomorphic pendant - Image 1
Zoomorphic pendant - Image 2
Zoomorphic pendant - Image 3

Diquís

Zoomorphic pendant

Diquís, 700-1549

Thumbnail 1
Thumbnail 2
Thumbnail 3
Scroll

Diquís

Zoomorphic pendant

Diquís, 700-1549

Physical Qualities Gold-copper alloy, 3 1/4 in. (8.2 cm.)
Credit Line Bequest of Alan Wurtzburger
Object Number 1960.30.78
The technology of goldworking thrived in cultures across South and Central America for millennia. Pioneered by artists in the Andes around 2000 BCE, the methods to create gold artworks spread northward via trade networks. Moving along the Andean mountain chain through Colombia, it arrived at the Isthmus region, which includes Panama and Costa Rica, by 100 CE. Intercultural trade spread both the material and manufacturing methods, including a technique that combined gold and copper to create an alloy which could be chemically treated to resemble pure gold. Indigenous people adorned themselves with striking ornaments that communicated prestige, power, and rank. Tolima gold pendants often depicted figures that blend attributes from the human and animal worlds. Scholars believe these figures may represent shamanistic transformations, as shaman healers were thought to transform into animals to interact with the divine. Within Costa Rican goldworking traditions, birds played a prominent role. The Chiriquí-Veraguas and Diquís people often depicted birds of prey whose ability to fly high above and approach the sun would have inspired awe.
Ancient Americas Gallery Rotations 2021

Ancient Americas Gallery Rotations 2022

Ancient Americas Gallery Rotations 2023

Ancient Americas Rotations 2024
Andre Emmerich, "Seat of the Sun and Tears of the Moon," Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1965, pp. 105-107, 154-155, 173-174.
Julie Jones, "El Dorado, The Gold of Ancient Colombia," NY: The Center of Inter-American Relations and The American Federation of Arts, 1974, pp. 41-48,
Lleras-Perez, Roberto. "The Iconography and Symbolism of Metallic Votive Offerings in the Eastern Cordillera, Colombia." From Pre-Columbian Gold: Techology, Style, and Iconography. London: British Museum Press, 2000: 112-131.
"African, Oceanic & Pre-Columbian Art," Sotheby's, New York, May 12, 2005, sale no. 8095, lot 234, pp. 134-135, ill.
Joanne Pillsbury, et al, eds., "Golden Kingdoms, Luxury Arts in the Ancient Americas, LA: The J. Paul Getty Museum and The Getty Research Institute, 2017, pp. 2, 16, 58, 177-180, no. 90, p. 187.

Culture

Diquís

2000–2000

Meet Diquís →

Explore the Collection Further

Diquís and Chiriquí-Veraguas
Pendant in the form of an eagle or king vulture with outstretched wings
700–1549
Atlantic Watershed and Greater Nicoyan
Anthropomorphic Pendant with Zoomorphic Head
300–700
Diquís and Chiriquí-Veraguas
Pendant in the form of an eagle with outstretched wings
500–1519
Atlantic Watershed and Greater Nicoyan
Anthropomorphic Pendant with Zoomorphic Headdress
300–500
Diquís
Feline figure
999–1519
Atlantic Watershed and Greater Nicoyan
Anthropomorphic Pendant with Zoomorphic Headdress
300–500
Greater Chiriquí and Diquís
Standing Figure
800–999
Kuba and Unidentified
Belt (yet) with Nineteen Pendant Power Objects
1917–1949
Greater Chiriquí and Diquís
Vessel
999–1549
Nguni
Zoomorphic Snuff Container
2000
Diquís
Anthropomorphic Pendant
700–1549
Ndebele
Pendants for a Married Woman's Headband (Milingakobe)
1900–1999