
Taíno ritual seat - Wikipedia
This seat is one of two Taíno seats called Duho in the British Museum that were originally found on the island of Hispaniola. The other is also modelled anthropomorphically on a man, but in that case the resemblance to a man on his stomach is more proportional.
Duho - Taino Museum
Duho or seat made from a single piece of wood, representing an anthropomorphic figure with sculptured head and engraved geometric designs on the back, used for the cohoba ritual. The Duho was also used by the cacique while watching the ball game played by the Tainos. The head represented the deification of the dog called Opigielguouiran.
Duhos - Ritual Seat - Taino Museum
Duhos Duho, Haiti, Taino, Taino Museum Info: Duhos - Ritual Seat This wooden seat was used by chiefs in the Caribbean Taino culture during ceremonial communication with the spirit world.
Symbols - Taino Museum
Duho. Ceremonial seat used by warlords to preside over the ceremonies and rituals. Totem "God of Snuff." This figure was used as funerary urn for major characters and loved ones of the tribe. Sun God. Sale of a cave of the country's chief Mautiatibuel (son of dawn) or "Lord of the Dawn", which returns to hide, while the moon comes out of there ...
Lucayan duho - National Museum of the American Indian
The piece epitomizes the duho style found north of Hispaniola and Puerto Rico, the Taíno heartland, in the islands of the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos; it is a local variant, handiwork of the Lucayano.
Taíno duho - Smarthistory
Dr. Lauren Kilroy-Ewbank: [0:19] This is what’s known as a duho, a type of seat that is often low to the ground. The one that we’re looking at has an anthropomorphic or zoomorphic face on one end, then a slightly curved back where you would actually sit. And then on the other side what looks like a small, short tail and then the four legs.
Curious Ritual Wooden ‘Duho’ Stool Of Ancient Taino People
2017年9月12日 · Wooden four-legged stool carved in anthropomorphic form and inlaid with gold; called duho. Image credits: British Museum. The wood of the duho - smooth and perfect - originated from the Caribbean and was intentionally chosen and had remarkable qualities. It was so unusually dense that it could sink in water.
Duho (Ceremonial Seat) | Taíno | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Title: Duho (Ceremonial Seat) Date: 11th–15th century. Geography: Puerto Rico, Caribbean. Culture: Taíno. Medium: Stone. Dimensions: H. 9 13/16 × W. 6 5/16 × D. 11 13/16 in. (25 × 16 × 30 cm) Classification: Wood-Sculpture. Credit Line: National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., Gift of George Latimer ...
Duho (Ceremonial Seat) - The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Title: Duho (Ceremonial Seat) Date: 1407–45. Geography: Turks and Caicos, Caribbean, Cave Blue Hills. Culture: Taíno (Lucayan) Medium: Wood (Carapa sp.) Dimensions: H. 14 15/16 × W. 7 5/16 × L. 32 1/2 in. (38 × 18.6 × 82.5 cm) Classification: Wood-Sculpture
Ceremonial Seat (duho) or Platter - Saint Louis Art Museum
Ceremonial Seat (duho) or Platter. Culture Taino. Date c.1315–1416. Material Wood. found in Dominican Republic, North and Central America. Classification Furniture, wood. Collection Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas. Current Location On View, Gallery 112. Dimensions