Pott origins

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Pottery of the Ancient World The Beginnings of Ceramics Back to www.pottery.netfirms.com

Transcript of Pott origins

Page 1: Pott origins

Pottery of the Ancient World

The Beginnings of Ceramics

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Resources

Hands in Clay: An Introduction to Ceramics, Charlotte F. Speight, 1983

Victor Bryant’s web site, http://www.victor.bryant.hemscott.net/

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Fired Clay Figurines

Made of clay and bone ash, this is the tiny baked clay figurine is known as the "Venus" of Dolni Vestonice. It is thought to be about 29,000 years old and have been fired in a beehive shaped kiln in a Stone Age village.

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Ceramics in Prehistoric Ceramics in Prehistoric Western Asia Western Asia

An Outline Map of Western Asia Today(also called the Middle East).

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Fired clay figurine about 2.5 inches high. Made about 7000 BC. from Tepe Sarab a prehistoric village site in Western Iran.

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This tiny fired clay image of a wild boar c.7000 BC. was also from Tepe Sarab in Iran

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Enthroned goddess in baked clay. c.5500 BC. Possibly giving birth. Two leopard-like heads on either side. - Çatal Hüyük - Anatolia Turkey.

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A New Container Comes Out Of The Bonfire

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A Discovery

Shells, skulls, nuts and scooped out fruit skins all must have been used to hold water, milk or blood by our prehistoric ancestors. The discovery that small lumps of clay could be squeezed and pressed into cup or bowl shapes and then put in a bonfire to make hard was an important stage in the life of most prehistoric communities. Using the palm, thumb and fingers to squash, squeeze, press and poke, small bowls could have been made by pressing out from seed and nut husks or shells and also by pressing lumps of clay over large pebbles.

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The Basket and the Pot

In some communities basket making probably led to the technique of pottery making.

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Egyptian Basket

Baskets like this made from a variety of plants would be strong enough to carry quite heavy loads. If such a basket were lined with animal skins and fat, even water could be carried from the river to the village.

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Clay-lined Baskets

At some point, probably before 7000 B.C., someone discovered an easier, less wasteful, way to waterproof a basket - by smearing the inside with a layer of stiff mud or clay.

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A Better Basket

Serious fires must have destroyed huts, even villages on occasion. The discovery that clay lined baskets became hard rot proof pots after such a conflagration must have been one of the few benefits of such a calamity. It would nevertheless have been a very valuable discovery.

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A New Technology

A typical tiny prehistoric pot pressed out of a small lump of clay with the thumb and shaped in the palm of one hand with the fingers of the other hand. Decorated with just a row of finger marks round the sides.

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Another tiny thumb pot but with a more sophisticated shape. Probably for ritual use, it has holes for hanging and four beak spouts. From a neolithic "shrine" in Liguria, NW Italy.

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Women Potters

Clay pots would have made carrying water and cooking a lot easier than using leather or woven containers.

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Reflections

What is the definition of “technology”?

What do you think of when you think of new technologies? Why?

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More Reflections

What are some reasons why people have come up with new technologies?

What “old” technologies might pottery have replaced (been a better solution for)?

Why do you think a technology continues to be learned and used by people?

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Ancient Bowls: Various Decorative Techniques

Impressing

Stamping

Scratching

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Egyptian Bowl

Bands have been scratched into the red clay, allowed to stiffen a bit, and then white slip brushed or smeared over and then allowed to dry somewhat more. It could then be gently scraped until the incised pattern appeared white, looking rather like stitches. This decoration may have been done in stages.

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Detail of Egyptian Pot

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Pottery Techniques

The technique of pressing and coiling clay vessels and firing them in simple bonfires had probably spread throughout most of villages of Western Asia before 6500 BC. The pressed and scratched decoration was soon followed by brush painting with different clay slips, usually cream, brown, red, black or white. But human beings are generally slow to accept change; most of us like to keep the things we are used to.

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Brushed Decoration

A bold basket decoration brushed on using red and white slip. A small food bowl from Hacilar in western Turkey c.5000 BC.

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Examples of Brushed Decorations

Part of a collection of shards from this early period in Western Asia showing the brush strokes and incised marks imitating basket patterns.

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Brushed Dish

Halfa type dish found at Arpachiyah North Iraq c.5000 BC.

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Reconstructed Designs

Color drawing reconstruction of the dish found at Arpachiyah in North Iraq.

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ReflectionsWhat techniques of construction were first used in creating pots?

What types and styles of decorations were first used?

Can you find pots being done today using these same methods of construction and decoration?