Ten thousand years of pottery
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Bibliographic Information
Ten thousand years of pottery
British Museum Press, 2002
4th ed. (rev., updated, redesignes and retitled)
- : pbk
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Note
This ed. originally published: 2000
Bibliography: p. 345-347
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Pottery is one of the oldest and most widespread arts practised by humankind and its history can be traced back to the Stone Age. Changes in styles and types occurred in response to changing social, economic and technical demands, so that vessels and other objects made in clay can reveal much about the societies in which they were produced. This highly illustrated and readable account begins with the early civilizations of the Near and Middle East and traces the production of ceramics throughout the cultures of the globe, from the Mediterranean and the Orient to Islam and ancient America, from neolithic Britain to Wedgwood and de Morgan, from twentieth-century Africa and India to Scandinavia and Australasia, with a final chapter on the newest work of studio potters today. The illustrations, drawn from museums, collectors and practising potters around the world, provide representative examples of the major styles, materials and forms of all periods, allowing the reader to make comparisons and see relationships between the works of cultures which may be widely separated in space and time.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1 Early Beginnings 2 The Ancient World: Cyprus, The Cyclades, Greece, Italy 3 The Oriental World: China, Korea, Japan, South-East Asia 4 The Islamic World 5 Continental European Earthenwares and Stonewares: Byzantium, Italy, Spain and Portugal, Germany, France, The Low Countries, Scandinavia 6 Britain: c. 200 BC until AD 1800 7 European Porcelain: Germany, France, Italy and Spain, Scandinavia, The Low Countries and Russia, Britain and Ireland 8 American-Indian Pottery 9 Living Traditions: Modern Tribal and Indigenous Societies 10 Modern America 11 Craft into Industry: Britain 1750-1900 12 The Arts and Crafts Movement: Britain, North America, Germany and Austria, Scandinavia, The Netherlands, Hungary, Italy, 1850-1920 13 Artist-Potters 14 Studio Ceramics Today: Frivolity, Self-Expression, Content Glossary of Technical Terms, Museum and National Collections of Pottery Bibliography, Illustration References, Index of Names
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