Accession No
1988.325
Description
Mochila. Bag made from woven pale white cotton with ten purple horizontal lines across the body and a circle on the bottom; some light blue and pink smudges possibly dye. The structural shape of the body is a conical half sphere with a flat bottom. The handle is short and wider in the middle and narrower at the edges; woven with strings of twisted cotton.
Place
Americas; South America; Colombia; Sierra Nevada Mountains; San Andres
Period
Source
Salt, George (Dr) [collector and donor]
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
1988.325
Cultural Affliation
Arhuaco; Kogi
Material
Cotton; Dye
Local Term
Muchila
Measurements
350mm x 500mm
Events
Description ()
Label tied to object notes: 'Collected and donated by Dr. George Salt, Zoologist in Colombia among the Arhucao Indians, 1926-27.'
Event Date
Author: rachel hand
Context (Field collection)
Collected in 1926 by Dr George Salt, zoologist among the Arhuaco (1926-1927).
Salt was studying the banana fruit-​scarring beetle (Colaspis hyperchlora) while working for the Colombia Division of the United Fruit Company.
Event Date 1926
Author: Lucie Carreau
Description (Physical description)
Catalogue card for 1988.325 notes: 'Woven cotton [bag]. White with eleven horizontal lines in plum (purple). Wide strap in white. Stained with age.'
Event Date 1988
Author: maa
Context (Related Documents)
Printed Accessions register noted 'CULTURAL AREA. Ethnic group: Kogi Indian. Cultural Group: Arhuaco Indian. Linguistic group: Arhuaco Indian'.
Event Date 1988
Author: maa
Context (Acquisition Details)
Acquired by MAA on 18 May 1988.
Event Date 18/5/1988
Author: Lucie Carreau
Conservation (Freezing)
CON.2024.6040 | Freezing
Event Date 11/10/2024
Author: Kirsty Kernohan
Description (Physical description)
Muchila. Bag made from woven pale white cotton with ten purple horizontal lines across the body and a circle on the bottom; some light blue and pink smudges possibly dye. The structural shape of the body is a conical half sphere with a flat bottom. The handle is short and wider in the middle and narrower at the edges; woven with strings of twisted cotton.
Event Date 4/9/2024
Author: Diana Serediuc
Context (Analysis)
Would have been worn suspended about the neck, and be one of several bags carried at the same time by both men and women.
From knowledge shared during filming as part of the Carrier Bag Project by artists and researchers Dr Marina Velez Vago and Julieta Aranda, at the Centre for Material Culture, 3/05/2025
Event Date 23/5/2025
Author: Rachel Hand
FM:80269
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