Top Tweets for #Peruvianart
ellos son ukta e iklla - algunos de mis personajes, pronto traeré más. La mitología andina y latina es muy extensa y hay mucho con lo que poder crear⚡
.
#cienciaFiccion #OCs #scifiart #seinen #peruvianArt

The voids pero como si fueran los desconolocos. (4/4)
#art #draw #peruvianart #arte #dibujos #artwork #illustration #drawing #perfectosdesconocidos #desconolocos #videogame #fyp #discord #sketch

The voids pero como si fueran los desconolocos. (3/4)
#art #draw #peruvianart #arte #dibujos #artwork #illustration #drawing #perfectosdesconocidos #desconolocos #persona #persona5 #joker #videogame #fyp #persona5royal #sketch

Bottle in the shape of a #dog
Nasca or Wari culture, South Coast,
Peru, 1-600 CE
Ceramic, slip; H. 5 1/8 × W. 3 1/2 × D. 6 1/2 in. (13 × 8.9 × 16.5 cm)
On display at @metmuseum (1988.281.2)
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #DogsInArt

Fragment of a Band (with #tadpole design!)
Nazca culture, Peru (South Coast),
Early Intermediate period, c.400–700 CE
Camelid fiber & cotton
56 1/4 x 1 3/8 in. (142.8 x 3.5 cm)
Saint Louis Art Museum 185:1944 https://t.co/ao3LOl9oas
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt
#Frogs
“Peruvian textiles frequently contain repeated imagery with alternating colors and inversions. These carefully devised patterns were highly symbolic, representing the organization of varied designs into a harmonious whole. The imagery on this textile could also evoke relationships between forms, particularly those in the natural world. Undulating tadpoles on the Nasca band invoke their eventual transformation into amphibians.”

#FrogFriday 🐸:
Silver #Frog Ornament
Sican / Lambayeque, Northern Peru, c. 800-1100 CE
5.125" W x 5.375" H (13 cm x 13.7 cm)
Artemis Gallery via https://t.co/SWnhgaJzqy
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt
“A very large, hammered silver head ornament of a circular, medallion-like form, adorned by an amphibian - frog or toad - in repousse with outspread legs, bumpy skin, and an expressive happy visage presenting round bulging eyes, pierced nostrils, and a wide smile. In addition to the piece's impressive artistry, it is a richly symbolic piece, as the frog (rana) was associated with rain, water, the sustenance that it brings, spring, fertility, and rebirth in the Pre-Columbian world.
Silver working is a two thousand year old tradition in Peru. To the ancients of Peru, precious metals indicated special status. Both silver and gold were symbols of power and prestige worn exclusively by the elite. They signified high social status and respected political authority during life as well as after death when placed as votive offerings in tombs with the honored deceased. Silver was used to create numerous types of objects, ranging from personal ornaments like this example to effigy vessels shaped in the likenesses of human figures, animals, and birds.”

#TwoForTuesday:
Noserings (w/ #crustaceans)
Mochica (Moche) culture, Peru, Early Intermediate (200-600 CE) / Origin: Huaca Cao Viejo
Bimetallic gold & silver w/ inlaid shell & stone eyes
El Brujo Archaeological Complex EBBME00000-13,20
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt
https://t.co/LadCfSTIMt

#SeaLion Effigy Vessel
Moche culture, Peru, c.200-800 CE
Polychrome ceramic, H 10 3/8 in. (26.35 cm)
https://t.co/kIPEFbVQv2
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt

#TwoForTuesday :
Double Chambered Bottle
Representing a Spondylus #Shell and Strombus Shell
Moche culture, North coast Peru, 1st-7th c.
Earthenware, slip
On display at Baltimore Museum of Art (2005.31)
#IndigenousArt #AndeanArt #PeruvianArt #Mollusks

For #NationalFoxDay 🦊:
#Fox - Head Bottle (aka Spout-and-bridge bottle with fox)
Topará, South Coast Peru (Necropolis)
Ceramic, slip
H. 7 1/4 × W. 6 3/4 × D. 7 1/2 in. (18.4 × 17.1 × 19.1 cm)
@metmuseum (63.232.49)
#AncientArt #PeruvianArt #IndigenousArt
“For several centuries around the time of the beginning of the Common Era, artists of the Paracas people on Peru’s South Coast developed a striking style of ceramics featuring a colorful palette achieved with post-fire paints (see, for example, MMA 1979.206.1148). Around 200 BCE, however, potters from the northern part of the Ica region distinguished themselves from their Paracas counterparts by crafting elegant, highly burnished, monochromatic bottles in a style known as Topará. Red or cream slips—liquid suspensions of clay and pigments—were used to cover the entire vessel, and the smooth surfaces were carefully burnished to produce a uniform shine.
Many Topará vessels were shaped like gourds (see, for example, MMA 63.232.55), others like animals. This fox bottle was created by attaching a modeled canine head to the globular body. The frontal limbs were delineated by incisions in soft clay and later painted with a cream slip. The simplicity of the rendering contrasts with the dramatic expression of the animal. A spout in the back is connected to the head with a bridge handle. This vessel type, known as a spout-and-bridge bottle, was the South Coast’s signature shape for the following millennium.
Topará-style bottles were found in cemeteries, such as those excavated on the Paracas Peninsula at the beginning of the twentieth century by the Peruvian archaeologist Julio C. Tello. Tello dubbed the abandoned houses converted into communal graves "Necropolis," and that name has become attached to the style of ceramics, textiles, and other objects that accompanied the hundreds of funerary bundles found there. Multiple styles of ceramics—Paracas, Topará, and early Nasca—have been found together in a single tomb by archaeologists, suggesting that multiple communities of producers, each with their own techniques, palette, and image repertoire, did not only exist simultaneously but also provided wares for the same families.”
https://t.co/5G9Hf8kqJl

Sacred guardian
I wanted to combine Japanese aesthetics with Peruvian culture, featuring a reimagined "Cabeza clava" with large horns and other ornaments.
#digitaldrawing #procreate #truegrittexturesupply #cabezaclava #noaineeded #illustration #japaneseart #peruvianart


buenas! quieres llevarte un dibujo gratis? pues aqui lo tendras!
necesitamos de tu ayuda para poder hacer viral un cortometraje que nuestro equipo creó y ahora mismo estamos que competimos para hacerlo viral!!
link aqui➡️https://t.co/FZFvvXf0DZ
#sorteo #fanarts #Peruvianart #peru

Ambassador @alfredoferrerod presented El Viaje/Desplazamientos, a piece donated by Peruvian artist @cruncietanaka, to @AMAmuseum. @CancilleriaPeru
#PeruvianArt #PeruvianCulture

We have added Memento 11 by Carlo Vega (Instagram: [at]carlovega) to Gallery B. See other 3D-rendered art at Gallery B (link in bio.) Our mission is to showcase compelling digital art and elevate the recognition of digital art on the @Tezos blockchain. #peruvianart
#FishFriday 🐟:
Stirrup-spout vessel: man on #fish
Salinar culture, Peru, 300–100 BCE
Ceramic and slip
7 5/16 x 4 17/32 x 8 5/8 in. (18.6 x 11.5 x 21.9 cm)
Dallas Museum of Art 1984.W.88 https://t.co/qId2AQXfsK
#IndigenousArt #PeruvianArt
PS is it just me or does the fish's face look like the 😬 emoji LOL

#FrogFriday 🐸:
Polychrome #frog effigy bottle
Nasca (Ica, Peru), 100 BCE - 800 CE
14 x 8.8 x 9 cm
@MOA_UBC 2990/498
https://t.co/wvZj8zowzn
#IndigenousArt #PeruvianArt

Last Seen Hashtags on Sotwe
Most Popular Users

Elon Musk 
@elonmusk
240.7M followers

Barack Obama 
@barackobama
119.2M followers

Donald J. Trump 
@realdonaldtrump
111.7M followers

Cristiano Ronaldo 
@cristiano
110.7M followers

Narendra Modi 
@narendramodi
107M followers

Rihanna 
@rihanna
97.7M followers

NASA 
@nasa
92.2M followers

Justin Bieber 
@justinbieber
90.9M followers

KATY PERRY 
@katyperry
87.7M followers

Taylor Swift 
@taylorswift13
81.6M followers

Lady Gaga 
@ladygaga
73.1M followers

Virat Kohli 
@imvkohli
70M followers

Kim Kardashian 
@kimkardashian
69.8M followers

YouTube 
@youtube
68.7M followers

Bill Gates 
@billgates
63.9M followers

Neymar Jr 
@neymarjr
62.7M followers

The Ellen Show
@theellenshow
62.4M followers

CNN 
@cnn
61.9M followers

X 
@x
60.8M followers

Selena Gomez 
@selenagomez
60.8M followers
























