The Met owns a labret (“LAY-bret”) made mostly of this material shaped like a serpent with a movable tongue. The prefix “mono-” was added to the name of this material by Yves Klein to title his series of panels that use this material, and he threw some of this material into the Seine as part of one work. Zoomorphic sculptures called tunjos (“TOON-hose”) were made of either this material or tumbaga, which consists partly of this material. A votive raft made mostly of this material discovered in Pasca may refer to a ceremony in which objects made of this material were thrown into a lake; that raft is owned by a museum named for this material in Bogotá. This material was used to sculpt figures of Tellus and Neptune, who lean away from each other, on the Cellini Salt Cellar. For 10 points, Muisca metalwork using what material may have inspired the legend of El Dorado? ■END■
ANSWER: gold [accept gold leaf; accept gold dust; prompt on metal; accept Monogold; accept Gold Museum or Museo de Oro]
<Painting & Sculpture>
= Average correct buzz position