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Books > Arts & Architecture > Art forms, treatments & subjects > Ceramic arts, pottery, glass > General
This book is a comprehensive study of visual humour in ancient
Greece, with special emphasis on works created in Athens and
Boeotia. Alexandre G. Mitchell brings an interdisciplinary approach
to this topic, combining theories and methods of art history,
archaeology and classics with the anthropology of humour, and
thereby establishing new ways of looking at art and visual humour
in particular. Understanding what visual humour was to the ancients
and how it functioned as a tool of social cohesion is only one
facet of this study. Mitchell also focuses on the social truths
that his study of humour unveils: democracy and freedom of
expression; politics and religion; Greek vases and trends in
fashion; market-driven production; proper and improper behaviour;
popular versus elite culture; carnival in situ; and the place of
women, foreigners, workers and labourers within the Greek city.
Richly illustrated with more than 140 drawings and photographs,
this study amply documents the comic representations that formed an
important part of ancient Greek visual language from the sixth to
the fourth centuries BC.
In der Wirtschaftsgeschichte sind historische Ausarbeitungen zu
marktnahen Themen wie Absatz- und Preispolitik weitgehend
unterreprasentiert. Am Beispiel der Porzellanmanufaktur Meissen im
18. Jahrhundert soll nun diese Lucke geschlossen werden. Die
Meissner Manufaktur seit 1710 die wohl beruhmteste und alteste
Porzellanmanufaktur Europas gilt mit ihren kunstlerisch
hochwertigen Porzellanen als Inbegriff des Barock und Rokoko. Der
Autor zeigt auf, dass Marketingthemen wie Preispolitik und
-strategie keine Erscheinungen des modernen industriellen
Zeitalters sind, sondern schon seit dem fruhen 18. Jahrhundert die
Entscheidungstrager im Manufakturwesen wesentlich beschaftigt
haben. Die Studie untersucht anhand historischer Dokumente die
vorherrschenden Preis- und Vertriebsstrategien, den operativen
Einfluss der sachsischen Landesherrschaft unter dem
"Porzellanliebhaber" August dem Starken und seinen Nachfolgern, die
internen Entscheidungsprozesse zur Preisfindung, die verschiedenen
Kalkulationsmethodiken, den Umgang mit dem Wettbewerb und nicht
zuletzt auch die Entwicklung des betriebswirtschaftlichen Know-hows
im vorindustriellen Zeitalter. Es zeigt sich, dass die damaligen
Akteure im Umgang mit dem "weissen Gold" mehr als nur einmal preis-
und absatzpolitisches Neuland betreten mussten."
This richly illustrated volume highlights one of the most
significant collections of African ceramics in the United States,
distinguished for its breadth and representation of women’s
excellence in ceramics. Collected by William M. Itter, Professor
Emeritus of Fine Arts at Indiana University, the scope of the
collection is wide-ranging, representing 65 different ethnicities
and more than 20 countries in Africa. Illustrating a range of
approaches to art making, the works are organised around topics
that explore place, time, artistic media, and cultural identity and
addressing issues related to cross-cultural exchange, cultural
diversity, embodiment, temporality, and spirituality. Organised by
the Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University,
this beautifully designed book celebrates the remarkable work and
contributions of women artists.
This book examines how Romans used their pottery and the
implications of these practices on the archaeological record. It is
organized around a flow model for the life cycle of Roman pottery
that includes a set of eight distinct practices: manufacture,
distribution, prime use, reuse, maintenance, recycling, discard,
reclamation. J. Theodore Pena evaluates how these practices
operated, how they have shaped the archaeological record, and the
implications of these processes on archaeological research through
the examination of a wide array of archaeological, textual,
representational, and comparative ethnographic evidence. The result
is a rich portrayal of the dynamic that shaped the archaeological
record of the ancient Romans that will be of interest to
archaeologists, ceramicists, and students of material culture."
The Chinese are famed as the first to have discovered and mastered
the techniques needed to produce porcelain. Yet carefully crafted
ceramics are valued not only for their beauty, but also as precious
cultural artifacts shedding light on the period in which they were
produced. Chinese ceramics represent works of art both in
themselves and as a medium for painting, poetry, calligraphy and
sculpture. This accessible, introductory survey takes the reader
through the rich history of Chinese ceramics from primitive pottery
to delicate porcelain, complemented by full-color illustrations
throughout.
Will Lilacwell works its magic once more?Times are changing in
Lilacwell. Not only have Jasper and Adira settled into The Laurels
manor, newly engaged and firmly casting off the shackles of their
respective city lives, but Adira's friend and ex-colleague, Rory,
is now also looking to leave London for the quiet beauty of the
Forest of Bowland. Sparks flew when he and Lilacwell's innkeeper,
Cassie, met at the summer party a few months ago, but Cassie has
been loved and left before and is reluctant to put all her trust in
Rory, who might return to his promising law career for the right
offer. With Jasper and Adira's wedding just around the corner, love
is in the air for Lilacwell, and some big changes are coming to the
sleepy village... A beautifully cosy romance for fans of Holly
Martin and Jessica Redland.
The kilns at Morgantina, site of the well-known excavations in
central Sicily, are an outstanding example of multiple potters'
workshops in use during the late Hellenistic period. In fully
documenting these ten kilns, excavated between 1955 and 1963,
Ninina Cuomo di Caprio offers both a representative cross-section
of the physical setting of ceramic production in this ancient Greek
city and evidence for its daily industrial activity. She includes
detailed plans and section drawings of each kiln and formulates
hypotheses on its operation in light of modern thermodynamics. The
text, which is in Italian, is preceded by an English-language
summary. Cuomo di Caprio's archaeological study of the kiln
structures and their ceramic products is supplemented by such
diagnostic tools as thermoluminescence analysis, neutron activation
analysis, X-ray diffraction, and optical examination by polarizing
microscope. Opening an entirely new window into the everyday
working practices of the Morgantina potters, this study
demonstrates that they operated at a very sophisticated level:
selecting and purifying specific clays, and adding certain
materials to manipulate their working and firing
characteristics.
Originally published in 1992.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
technology to again make available previously out-of-print books
from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press.
These paperback editions preserve the original texts of these
important books while presenting them in durable paperback
editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly
increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the
thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since
its founding in 1905.
The brightly colored tin-enameled earthenware called maiolica was
among the major accomplishments of decorative arts in 16th-century
Italy. This in-depth look at the history of maiolica, told through
140 exemplary pieces from the world-class collection at the
Metropolitan Museum, offers a new perspective on a major aspect of
Italian Renaissance art. Most of the works have never been
published and all are newly photographed. The ceramics are featured
alongside detailed descriptions of production techniques and a
consideration of the social and cultural context, making this an
invaluable resource for scholars and collectors. The imaginatively
decorated works include an eight-figure group of the Lamentation,
the largest and most ambitious piece of sculpture produced in a
Renaissance maiolica workshop; pharmacy jars; bella donna plates;
and more. Published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art / Distributed
by Yale University Press Exhibition Schedule: The Metropolitan
Museum of Art (08/29/16-02/26/17)
This richly illustrated book showcases a previously unseen and
virtually unknown historical collection of Chinese ceramics, formed
in the early twentieth century by George Eumorfopoulos, a pivotal
figure in the appreciate of Asian art. Taken together, these
artifacts, now located at the Benaki Museum in Athens, Greece,
build a rare time capsule of Western tastes and preoccupations with
the East in the decades prior to World War II. The years between
the collapse of the Qing dynasty in 1911 and the establishment of
the People s Republic of China in 1949 marked an opening up of
China to the rest of the world and coincided with the first
archaeological excavations of the country s early cultures. Working
at the time in London, a center of imperialist power and global
finance, Eumorfopoulos and his colleagues were instrumental in
acquiring, assessing, interpreting, and manipulating the unearthed
objects. The years of isolation that followed this period allowed
aspects of his approach to become canonical, influencing later
scholarly research on Chinese material culture.This groundbreaking
exploration of approximately one hundred artifacts is not only an
important account of Eumorfopoulos s work, but also a story about
China and the West and the role antique materials played in their
cultural interplay. "
This comprehensive book is both a biographical exploration of the
early life of Mary Seton Watts and a survey of the pottery she
designed. Her roots in Scotland, her artistic career and her
marriage to the Victorian artist George Frederic Watts all
influenced the design of the Grade 1 listed Cemetery Chapel at
Compton and the art potteries which she then set up, both in
Compton (The Potters' Arts Guild) and in her home village near
Inverness. The pottery at Compton was in business for more than
fifty years, making terracotta garden ware, memorials and small
decorative pieces. It remained open through two World Wars and a
trade depression. This highly illustrated publication showcases the
beautiful and individual pieces of pottery and is a fitting tribute
to the ability of Mary Watts to coordinate both people and
resources.
In this publication the sinologist Rupprecht Mayer presents 143
Chinese reverse glass paintings from a private collection in
southern Germany. Traditional motifs of happiness, scenes from
plays and novels, landscapes, Chi na's entrance into modernity, and
the changing image of the Chinese woman define the central motifs.
Production of reverse glass paintings began in Canton in the 18th
century, of which only those that found their way to the West are
known today. After th e end of exports in the middle of the 19th
century this decorative art continued to enjoy popularity in China,
but only very few of the many fragile paintings in Chinese
households have survived the turmoil of wars and disruptions of the
19th and 20th cent uries. Reverse glass painting fell into oblivion
in China, with no collections in museums and very few private
collectors. This first study in the West presents the beauty of
this traditional art in all of its facets.
David Drake is recognized as one of the United States' most
accomplished nineteenth-century potters. Yet, though his pots-many
inscribed with original verse-sit in museums across the nation, he
is too often passed over when considering the early foundations of
African American poetry. Born in South Carolina at the beginning of
the nineteenth century, Drake produced hundreds of pieces while
under the surveillance of the enslavers who claimed him and his
work as their property. Still, asserts P. Gabrielle Foreman, he is
perhaps the only Black person in all of the free or slave states
whose literary work was preserved in neither books nor pamphlets
nor newspapers. His pots and jars served as pages as well as
ceramic vessels. This book examines how Drake's pottery and poetry
have inspired visual artists and poets who claim him as an artistic
ancestor. It features the Sir Dave (1998) series by artist Jonathan
Green, including thirteen paintings that have never been exhibited
or published together before. Accompanying and in dialogue with
Green's paintings is a twenty-poem cycle called All My Relation
(2015) by Glenis Redmond. Praise Songs includes the editor's
interview of Redmond and Green and essays by Redmond, Foreman, and
Lynnette Young Overby, the artistic director of a 2014
collaboration and performance featuring both Green's and Redmond's
work. As one of the first volumes to focus on Drake's legacy as a
writer, it also includes an updated compilation of all David
Drake's poetic inscriptions. This volume presents the artistic
legacy of one of the most well-known Black potters, and one of the
most innovative and underappreciated enslaved poets, of the
nineteenth century.
An original and entertaining catalogue for a travelling exhibition
that has already been much talked about. The expressive power of
glass emerges from the pages of the Glasstrees catalogue, which
travelled from the Venice Biennale to the Museum of Art and Design
of New York in February 2012. The excellent colour photographs
illustrate the glass sculptures and installations by
internationally-acclaimed artists and designers, some of the most
important on the international scene, who for the occasion tackled
one of the arts to have made Venice famous throughout the world.
This catalogue will become a "must" for collectors, designers,
students and connoisseurs.
With contemporary advertising and sales catalogues as its sources,
this book represents the first exhaustive survey of the Ikora and
Myra lines in glass produced between the 1920s and 1950s by the
Wurttembergische Metallwarenfabrik AG (WMF) at Geislingen/ Steige.
At the instigation of the then WMF director general, Hugo Debach,
WMF had been making high-quality art glass (called "Unika pieces",
indicating that they were one-of-a-kind) as well as lines in
mass-produced art glas (Ikora and Myra). First presented to the
public to great acclaim at the Wurttembergisches Landesmuseum in
Stuttgart by museum director G. E. Pazaurek, these pieces are now
much sought after as valuable collector's items. Ikora and Myra
Glass by WMF not only deals exhaustively with the history of this
glass but also provides aficionados and collectors of Ikora and
Myra glass for the first time with a complete catalogue of WMF
products. The availability of this information makes it possible,
first, to distinguish from the original later glass made as
imitation of WMF glass by rival competitors and, second, to
identify accurately each piece of Unika, Ikora or Myra glass.
The pottery industry was key for Burton-in-Lonsdale on the borders
of Yorkshire, Lancashire and Cumbria for nearly three centuries
until its demise in 1944. This book tells the story of Richard
Bateson, the last potter of Black Burton, a renowned thrower and
teacher. It encapsulates the history and traditions of this lost
trade; the personalities, the struggles, the humour alongside the
hard work. The book is a grand contribution to the history of
Burton, the history of pottery and the story of rural arts in
transformation from an industrial to a more artistic endeavour.
"The most comprehensive collection of history, stories, first-hand
accounts and photographs we are ever likely to see... social
history of a high order; rooted in its context, explored by those
who really understand how it was." From the Foreword by Mark
McKergow "(Richard) didn't like Bernard Leach's pots, because all
Leach's pots had a wobble and Richard's never did." David Frith,
Brookhouse Pottery
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