An Ancient Peruvian Site Reveals a Remarkable Painted Throne Room [View all]
All images courtesy of the Denver Museum of Nature & Science, shared with permission
September 25, 2024
Art History Science
Kate Mothes
Between about 350 and 850 C.E., a society known as the Moche thrived in the coastal valleys of northern Peru. Pañamarca, in the Nepeña Valley, is the southernmost center of the Moche culture and the site of a remarkable series of recent archaeological discoveries, including the latest: a monumental pillared hall with vibrantly painted walls.
The Archaeological Landscapes of Pañamarca, founded in 2018, is a collaboration between Peruvian and U.S. archaeologists, art historians, and conservators. Its research and digs are supported by the National Geographic Society, the Institute of Latin American Studies at Columbia University, and the Avenir Conservation Center at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science.
This year, archaeologists uncovered a pillared room containing evidence of its use by a high-status female leader. Scenes depict the powerful woman receiving visitors in procession or seated upon a throne.
Scholars will debate whether the woman painted on the walls of the throne room is human or mythical (a priestess, goddess, or queen), researchers say. But the physical evidence of the throne, including the erosion to its back support and the recovery of greenstone beads, fine threads, and even human hair, make clear that it was occupied by a real living personand the evidence all points to a seventh-century woman leader of Pañamarca.
The figure portrayed on the walls is associated with the crescent moon, the sea and its creatures, and the fiber arts. Additional murals uncovered this past July reveal a scene of an entire workshop of women spinning and weaving, along with a retinue of men carrying textiles and the leaders crownwhich includes her braids.
Lisa Trever, professor of art history at Columbia University, says, Pañamarca continues to surprise us, not only for the ceaseless creativity of its painters but also because their works are overturning our expectations of gender roles in the ancient Moche world.
More:
https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2024/09/panamarca-painted-throne-room/