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In Origins,
visitors will have the opportunity to learn about the earliest
uses of body art through archeological sculptures and ornaments,
including those from Egypt and Greece, as well as objects from
ancient Peru, Ecuador, Mexico, and Costa Rica, dating back as
early at 3000 BC.
If the impulse to create art is a defining sign of humanity, the
body may well have been the first canvas. Alongside paintings
on cave walls visited by early people over 30,000 years ago, we
find handprints, ochre deposits, and ornaments. And because the
dead were often buried with valuable possessions and provisions
for the afterlife, ancient burials reveal that people have been
tattooing, piercing, painting, and shaping their bodies for millennia.
All
of the major forms of body art known today appear in the ancient
world, and there is no evidence indicating a single place of origin
for particular techniques. Like people today, ancient peoples
used body art to express identification with certain people and
distinction from others. Through body art, members of a group
could define the ideal person and highlight differences between
individuals and groups. In the past, as today, body art may have
been a way of communicating ideas about the afterlife and about
the place of the individual in the universe.
A
variety of objects demonstrate the use of body art in ancient
times including an Egyptian fish-shaped make-up palette from 3650
BC to 3300 BC; a painted Greek vase from the fifth century BC
depicting tattooed Thracian women; a ceramic spout bottle depicting
the pierced face of a Moche warrior of Peru from AD 100-700; and
ceramics of painted Nayarit women from 300 BC to 300 AD.
introduction
| origins | representations
transformations | identities
| distinctions | reinvention
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