In addition, common conceptions of and approaches to ancient technology and craft production are compartmentalized and medium-based; i.e., studies are conducted within confines of a specific medium such as ceramics, metallurgy or an even more specific domain (e.g., blackware or base metal). These studies often do not consider the relationship of the craft under study to other crafts that were being practiced concurrently at local or regional level (Shimada in press).
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Figure 1. Map of the Batán Grande region in the mid-La Leche valley on the north coast of Peru The site of Sicán is situated near the intake of the Túcume canal off the La Leche river. Drawing by I. Shimada. |
Cross-craft interaction, the general term that subsumes multi- and intercraft interplay, as well as their material and organizational consequences, has received little attention in archaeology. Investigation has been hampered by the medium-specific approach and conception that pervade current craft production studies. This situation is understandable given the complexity and quantity of information to be leared and sought, our academic formation, and scarcity of research where multiple crafts are investigated in parallel and sufficient depth. An important additional factor is that, more often than not, examples of composite artifacts have been looted from graves and thus lack contextual data and the confidence that the exisiting components are complete or original (Carcedo and Shimada 1985; Shimada 1994b).
Yet, material culture is replete with examples of what are in
reality composites of products, knowledge and/or techniques derived
from what are analytically treated as distinct crafts, such as
ceramics, woodworking, lapidary, metallurgy, and weaving. Andean
examples include objects commonly subsumed under the rubric of
ritual paraphernalia or status items, such as Sicán and Chimú
ponchos with gold plaques sewn on, and Mochica metal masks with
inlaid shell eyes, ears and teeth. P. Lyon (1991) suggests that the
practice of demarcating each colored area of Pukara polychrome
ceramics with broad incisions mar have been adopted from the
incision and/or champlevé techniques extensively used in Pukara' S
well-developed stone carving tradition. The latter produced
rectangular stone slabs with flat relief carvings that, in tum, mar
well have influenced or been stimulated by textiles.
In this papel, I am concerned with issues of cross-craft
interaction; i.e., how a given product integrated materials,
knowledge and/or techniques from various crafts to achieve desired
effects and properties, and what such investigation reveals about
craft production and its products in general.

