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| Olga Fisch a collector per excellence! |
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All articles are written by some of our team co-workers and people related with our store, products and publications.
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GALLERY & MUSEUM personal collection

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PIARTAL (TuncahĂșan), TUZA (Cuasmal)
AND CAPULĂ (NEGATIVE OF CARCHI)
Integration Period
700 â 1532 A.C.E.
The pastos--farmers, merchants and metalworkers--inhabited Carchi Province in northern Ecuador, from the basin of the Chota-Mira Rivers to the GuĂĄitara River basin in Columbia. They formed a socially stratified group whose levels were distinguished in various ways. It appears that one of these ways was through their ceramics. Three types of pottery have been found: capulĂ, piartal and tuza
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PIARTAL (TUNCAHUĂN), TUZA (CUASMAL)
Piartal is characterized by the application of negative paint and designs outlined in red. This type of ceramics was certainly used by people of political importance. Tuza ceramics, decorated in positive paint with designs in red or maroon, were used by the rest of society, who especially inhabited the edges of the mountains.
Among the pastos we find an abundance of deep plates with ring-shaped bases, or pedestals, decorated with a wide range of geometrical motifs and other motifs inspired by the human figure or animals forms, especially monkeys, spiders and frogs.Â
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