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[Masapán bread sculptures of a witch and a pony]
Format
Visual material
Language
Spanish
Published/Created
[Calderón, Ecuador]: [producer not identified], [after 1940]
Description
2 figurines : bread, paint, lacquer, 30 x 38 cm
Details
Subject(s)
All Souls' Day
—
Ecuador
[Browse]
Getty AAT genre
folk art (traditional art)
—
Ecuador
[Browse]
Notes
Two masapán bread sculptures in one frame. One is a witch, the other is a pony.
Masapán, from maize dough (masa) and bread (pan), is a folk art tradition practiced uniquely in Calderón; a rural parish of Quito, Ecuador. The practice of making masapán figurines emerged in the 1940s. It grew out of the tradition of making guagua de pan, a sweet roll shaped "bread baby" decorated to look like a swaddled infant. Eaten and offered at graves on All Souls' Day (the Day of the Dead), the tradition is syncretic: eating T'anta wawa (Quechua for "bread" and "baby") is an ancestral rite in many Andean regions of South America.
OCLC
1295848988
Statement on responsible collection description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
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