Seat with Feline Support
Unknown Manteño artist, South-central coast, Ecuador. Seat with Feline Support, 800–1500 CE. Stone, 17 ⅞ x 22 ¾ x 13 ¼ inches. Denver Art Museum Collection: Gift of Mrs. Esther M. Luben, 2005.151.
Seat with Feline Support
Manteño
About A.D. 800–1500
Ecuador, Manabí, Cerro Jaboncillo
Stone
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Luben, 2005.151
Ecuador’s central coast region was occupied by the Manteño culture at the time of the Spanish conquest. Fragmented into several chiefdoms, the Manteño were agriculturists, fishermen, and traders. An important source of wealth was orange and purple spondylus shell, used in jewelry and prized as a sacred material throughout the Andean region. The mollusks, which thrive in Ecuador’s warm coastal waters, were collected by divers and traded as far south as what is now Chile.
Manteño shrines, located on hilltops in Manabí, contained low relief stone stelae, human statues, and U-shaped stone seats such as this one. Most seats, which were likely made for chiefs or nobles, are supported by a crouching feline or human figure. According to records, this seat was collected in 1907 by George H. Culpepper, an American archaeologist who took part in an expedition led by Marshall H. Saville. The team excavated at a hill called Cerro Jaboncillo, where they discovered many seats.