A Chancay ovoid pottery vessel, Peru, c. 1000-1400 A.D.

A Chancay ovoid pottery vessel, Peru, c. 1000-1400 A.D.

Code: 2615

£385.00

Description: An ovoid pottery vessel with the tubular neck modelled as a human face with two arms extending from the shoulder to each ear forming the handles. The facial details delineated in brown on a white ground, a decorated cap indicated in brown immediately below the rim, and the body of the vessel painted brown with a central reserved band containing a brown undulating line. An additional pair of hands and two feet modelled on the body. Some patchy surface wear and a chip to the rim, otherwise condition good.

Size: 190 mm/7.5 ins. high

Culture: Peru, Chancay

Date: c. 1000-1400 A.D.

Provenance: Ex Desmond Morris (born 1928) Collection, Oxford, and acquired in New York in 1980.

Background: Desmond Morris is a renown author (best known for his best seller ‘The Naked Ape’ published in 1967), zoologist, surrealist painter and passionate collector, noted for his collection of ancient Cypriote pottery, published as a sumptuous volume by Phaidon in 1985 (‘The Art of Ancient Cyprus’) which although out-of-print remains the best reference available for ancient Cypriote pottery. He first started collecting postage stamps as a small boy and then moved on to fossils and minerals, then seashells, then tribal art, then modern art, then ancient Cypriote art, amassing some 1100 fine Cypriote objects. He then moved on to collect Russian icons and amassed a fine collection of Precolumbian art, then he moved on to Chinese art and finally assembled a collection of Algerian Berber pottery. He bought almost all his pieces at Sotheby’s and Christie’s in London, when there was far more on the market than there is now, although he also bought some objects from dealers in London, New York and Europe. Following the death of his wife, Desmond sold much of his remaining collections (his famed Cypriote art collection had been sold much earlier to finance other collecting interests) and moved to a smaller house in Ireland to live near his family. We were fortunate to acquire a number of his Precolumbian pieces. Desmond always regarded it important to have one’s collection on display around you and not shut away in cupboards. His advice - only buy items that catch your eye and are somehow special. Perfect advice from a true connoisseur.

A rare opportunity to buy an object from the collection of one of Britains’ most distinguished private collectors. 

Supplied with a black metal tripod stand.