An Inca man requests a goddess of the Incas to hand over coca, but she refuses, holding a bottle of coca wine for herself. Colour lithograph by A. Mucha, 189-.

  • Mucha, Alphonse, 1860-1939.
Date:
[between 1890 and 1899?]
Reference:
658317i
  • Pictures
  • Online

Selected images from this work

View 1 image

About this work

Description

The episode may have been an invention of Mucha's. It is not mentioned by William G. Mortimer in his book Peru: history of coca, "the divine plant" of the Incas, New York 1901, though he mentions (p. 152) that an Incan queen (wife of Mayta Ccapac the fourth Inca emperor) was called Mama Coca and that her name was the deified name of coca (p. 230). Mortimer's frontispiece reproduces an allegorical watercolour by A. Robida showing Mama Coca cutting a sprig of coca leaves to present to a conquistador from Europe

Much foliate decoration in Art Nouveau style, including coca leaves in the goddess's earrings

Publication/Creation

Paris : [publisher not identified], [between 1890 and 1899?]

Physical description

1 print : lithograph, printed in colours ; image, border and lettering 12.7 x 34.9 cm

Lettering

Vin des Incas. Dans toutes les pharmacies. La coca du Pérou. Pour les convalescents. Au glycéro-phosphate de chaux. Divinité Incas refusant la coca à son peuple. Mucha

References note

M. Robert-Sterkendries, La santé s'affiche, Bruxelles: Therabel, 2003, no. 208, p. 113 (larger version)

Reference

Wellcome Collection 658317i

Languages

Where to find it

  • LocationStatusAccess
    Closed stores

Permanent link