effigies
(noun)
A likeness of a person.
Examples of effigies in the following topics:
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Beadwork and Ceramics in the Eastern Woodland Cultures
- In 1896, more than 1,000 carved and painted wooden objects—including masks, tablets, plaques, and effigies—were excavated in Key Marco, southwestern Florida.
- Spanish missionaries described similar masks and effigies in use by the Calusa late in the 17th century, although no examples of the Calusa objects from the historic period have survived.
- A human head effigy pot from the Mississippian culture, on display at the Hampson Museum State Park in Wilson.
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Tiwanaku and Wari
- These decorative objects typically depicted herders, effigies, trophy heads, sacrificial victims, and felines.
- They were created in wood, engraved bone, and cloth and depicted puma and jaguar effigies, incense burners, carved wooden hallucinogenic snuff tablets, and human portrait vessels.
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Chartreuse de Champmol
- Only two monuments were ever erected, both in the same style, with painted alabaster effigies with lions at their feet and angels with spread wings at their heads.
- Underneath the slab on which the effigies rested, small unpainted pleurants (mourners) were set among Gothic tracery.
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Ceramics in Early South America
- These decorative objects typically depicted herders, effigies, trophy heads, sacrificial victims, and felines.
- They were created in wood, engraved bone, and cloth and depicted puma and jaguar effigies, incense burners, carved wooden hallucinogenic snuff tablets, and human portrait vessels.
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Sculpture
- Life-size tomb effigies in stone or alabaster became popular among the wealthy, and grand multi-level tombs evolved.
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Gothic Architecture: The Abbey Church of Saint Denis
- The effigies of many of the kings and queens are on their tombs, but during the French Revolution, those tombs were opened and the bodies were moved to mass graves.
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Painting of the Mughal Period
- The style became notably more rigid, and portraits resembled abstract effigies.
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Woodlands in the East
- This Mississippian culture ceramic effigy jug was found at Rose Mound in Cross County, Arkansas, and dates from 1400-1600.