Bowl

İsim Bowl
Yazar Unknown
Basım Tarihi: 1260
Basım Yeri Kashan (made) -
Konu Foxes
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 9.9cm, Diameter: 21.6cm
Kütüphane: Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası C.1955-1910
Kayıt Numarası C.1955-1910
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Tarih 1260
Notlar This bowl illustrates the new shapes and designs used when lustre production resumed in Iran about 1260. Its shape and panelled decoration copy Chinese bowls imported at this time. The Mongol invasions disrupted lustre production in about 1220. When it resumed some forty years later, potters introduced new shapes and designs, as this bowl shows. About 1285, production ceased again, and no lustre ware was made in Iran until the 17th century. The technique of lustre decoration on ceramics was first developed in Iraq in the 9th century. Potters made a glazed vessel or tile with little or no decoration in the normal way. When the piece had cooled, they painted a design over the glaze in metallic compounds. The pot or tile was then fired again, this time with a restricted supply of oxygen. In these conditions, the metallic compounds broke down, and a thin deposit of copper or silver was left on the surface of the glaze. When polished, this surface layer reflected the light.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Fritware with lustre decoration Fritware Lustre-Painted
Fiziksel açıklama Fritware bowl with lustre-painted decoration divided into 8 wedges, with foxes and stylized inscriptions (2 wedges each) and interlocking S-shapes (4 wedges). The exterior divided into 'petal panels'.
Üslup Il-Khanid Islamic
Kaynağa git Victoria and Albert Museum Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru Victoria and Albert Museum

Bowl

Yazar Unknown
Basım Tarihi 1260
Basım Yeri Kashan (made) -
Konu Foxes
Tür Diğer
Dil Belirlenmemiş dil
Dijital Evet
Yazma Hayır
Fiziksel Boyutlar Height: 9.9cm, Diameter: 21.6cm
Kütüphane Victoria and Albert Museum
Demirbaş Numarası C.1955-1910
Kayıt Numarası C.1955-1910
Lokasyon Middle East Section
Tarih 1260
Notlar This bowl illustrates the new shapes and designs used when lustre production resumed in Iran about 1260. Its shape and panelled decoration copy Chinese bowls imported at this time. The Mongol invasions disrupted lustre production in about 1220. When it resumed some forty years later, potters introduced new shapes and designs, as this bowl shows. About 1285, production ceased again, and no lustre ware was made in Iran until the 17th century. The technique of lustre decoration on ceramics was first developed in Iraq in the 9th century. Potters made a glazed vessel or tile with little or no decoration in the normal way. When the piece had cooled, they painted a design over the glaze in metallic compounds. The pot or tile was then fired again, this time with a restricted supply of oxygen. In these conditions, the metallic compounds broke down, and a thin deposit of copper or silver was left on the surface of the glaze. When polished, this surface layer reflected the light.
Malzemeler ve teknikler Fritware with lustre decoration Fritware Lustre-Painted
Fiziksel açıklama Fritware bowl with lustre-painted decoration divided into 8 wedges, with foxes and stylized inscriptions (2 wedges each) and interlocking S-shapes (4 wedges). The exterior divided into 'petal panels'.
Üslup Il-Khanid Islamic
Victoria and Albert Museum - Osmanlıca el yazması arama motoru
Victoria and Albert Museum yönlendiriliyorsunuz...

Lütfen bekleyiniz.