Exhibiting Historical Art: Out of the Vault: Stories of People and Things

Origins - Role of Gold in the Indigenous Americas

Our story begins in Pre-Columbian Costa Rica, in the Diquís region. Unfortunately much of what we know about this era and its indigenous cultures comes from the period of contact with Europeans, beginning in 1492, therefore there remains much to discover. However, from these records along with archaeological clues and passed down stories, we can begin to piece the puzzle together.
Though the means by which metallurgy came to the Americas in the first place remains unknown, it first appeared in modern-day Peru, likely beginning 800-500 B.C. (Sweat, xix). Though its spread throughout the remainder of the Americas was slow, not reaching the Diquís region until around 800 A.D. (source?), this gave the material hundreds of years to imbed itself in Pre-Columbian culture before the arrival of European influence. With an entirely different set of worldviews and values than that of the Europeans, indigenous assessments of the worth of gold had little to do with purchasing power. Reflective, shiny light, such as that produced by gold, was deeply important to indigenous Americans. It was seen as possessing a connection to the spiritual world. Amerindians lived in a world where all of the senses could interconnect. Under the power of a trance, a shaman could connect a smell to a feeling. These trance-like states were seen as a way to reach enlightenment and connect with the cosmological world. As it hits the eye, light stimulates the brain such that it could create trancelike seizures for some individuals. Those who were seen as able to tap into the spiritual realm, convincing the supernatural spirits to act in accordance with the needs of earthly individuals, controlled power on Earth. The ability to do so was marked by the possession of shiny objects.  “As the spirit world glows with light, and its inhabitants similarly are shiny beings, the shaman emulates their supernatural nature by becoming brilliant, by having mastered knowledge and techniques that were also glowing: the whole trance experience becomes enveloped in symbolic shininess and color” (1,22).
A gold piece gained further value based on the technological processes behind shaping the piece. The raw gold materials came from nearby, rather than distant, mysterious lands as other popular materials did. However, few individuals knew the technologies behind processing and shaping gold. The specialization behind the transformation of gold added to its intrigue and worth. The wearer of a gold piece would be viewed as not only connected to the spirit world, but as having mastered earthly challenges as well. This is not to say that gold was reserved exclusively for the high status individuals. Though these people would have owned more and higher quality pieces to show power, gold could be worn by anyone. Certain pieces, such as embossed plaques would however be reserved for the especially powerful (3,93). Through these means, the ownership of gold certainly signified power and status in the Pre-Columbian Americas, however in a different sense than it would in the western world.

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