Tocapu

Geometrical motifs used by Incas
Tocapu. Textiles worn by the Inca elite consisting of geometric figures enclosed by rectangles or squares.

Tocapu (Tocapo or Tokapu) was a decorative artwork with discrete geometrical motifs. It was associated with Andean textiles, especially for the use of the Royals' clothing. Tocapu was also painted on wooden boards.

Motifs

Tocapu was an integral part of the various textiles used in the Inca Empire. The designs were woven into the fabrics. In Tocapu, a nearly square frame inside a field is divided and subdivided into various geometric shapes.[1]

Repeat Setting

A repeat of the designs was combined following the suitability, for example, of repeating the single design unit or forming a group of units, such as a band (for example, a band on the bottom of uncu) or sometimes Tocapu motifs were given in a scattered way also (without any arrangement).[1]

Study

Tocapu used by Incas always remained a subject of research for assuming the existence of pictographic or ideographic writing.[2][3]

About symbols and signs

The Tocapu is evaluated more than decorative values.

Santacruz Pachacuti Yamqui himself explained

each town was referred to by a sign system well recognized in the Andes, the pacarina. Manco Capac is credited with originating this custom whereby each province and each town chose an object to symbolize its origin.

Signs, songs, and memory in the Andes : translating Quechua language and culture[4]

  • Uncu with Tocapu
    Uncu with Tocapu
  • Uncu with Tocapu
    Uncu with Tocapu
  • Inca Tunic, 15th-16th Century
    Inca Tunic, 15th-16th Century
  • Nazca-Paracas mantle, 1-100 CE, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn.
    Nazca-Paracas mantle, 1-100 CE, Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn.
  • Paracas textile, 100-300 C.E., Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn.
    Paracas textile, 100-300 C.E., Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn.
  • Paracas mantle, c. 200 C.E., Larco Museum, Lima.
    Paracas mantle, c. 200 C.E., Larco Museum, Lima.
  • Wari textile fragment, 650-900 C.E., Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven.
    Wari textile fragment, 650-900 C.E., Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven.
  • Tie-dyed piecework
    Wari tunic, 750-950 C.E., Textile Museum, Washington, D.C.
  • Tupa Inca tunic with Tocapu, c. 1550 C.E., Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C.
    Tupa Inca tunic with Tocapu, c. 1550 C.E., Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C.
  • Painted textile fragment, 1000-1476 C.E., Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven.
    Painted textile fragment, 1000-1476 C.E., Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven.
  • Chimu shirt, 1450-1550 C.E., Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
    Chimu shirt, 1450-1550 C.E., Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.
  • Chancay sleeved tunic with flying condors
    Chancay sleeved tunic with flying condors

References

  1. ^ a b Phipps, Elena (2004). The Colonial Andes: Tapestries and Silverwork, 1530-1830. p. 8.
  2. ^ Clados, Christiane (2019). "Borrowed from the Ancestors: Tiwanaku and Wari Motifs in Inca Tocapus". Baessler-Archiv (65): 35–50.
  3. ^ Silverman, Gail P. (2008). A Woven Book of Knowledge: Textile Iconography of Cuzco, Peru. University of Utah Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-87480-909-1.
  4. ^ Harrison, Regina (1989). Signs, songs, and memory in the Andes : translating Quechua language and culture. Internet Archive. Austin : University of Texas Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-0-292-77627-2.