Attic Pottery Technology
The attic black and red figure vases served as aesthetic and technological referencepoints for the objects of domestic and decorative usage in very much the same way as the productsof the great names of european pottery and glass making i e.
Attic pottery technology. Ancient greek pottery due to its relative durability comprises a large part of the archaeological record of ancient greece and since there is so much of it over 100 000 painted vases are recorded in the corpus vasorum antiquorum it has exerted a disproportionately large influence on our understanding of greek society the shards of pots discarded or buried in the 1st millennium bc are. The measurements were performed on stations 2 3 and 9 1 at the synchrotron radiation source daresbury laboratory. Attic pottery was exported to magna graecia and even etruria the preference for attic vases led to the development of local south italian and etrurian workshops or schools strongly influenced by attic style but producing exclusively for local markets. Wedgwood sevres limoges meissen galle lalique.
Clay was generally prepared and refined in settling tanks so that different consistencies of material. Research recovery revival of classical attic pottery re3cap is a collaborative project between thetis authentics ltd the national centre for scientific research demokritos and tool ltd partly funded by the national strategic reference framework 2007 2013. 1990 investigation of the technology of manufacture of local lba theran pottery. The oldest evidence of pottery manufacture has been found at an archaeological site known as odai yamamoto in japan where fragments from a specific vessel have been dated to about 16 500 14 920 years ago non agricultural peoples of jomon period japan were producing clay pots used for food preparation that were elaborately decorated by about 13 000 years ago.
The clay keramos to produce pottery kerameikos was readily available throughout greece although the finest was attic clay with its high iron content giving an orange red colour with a slight sheen when fired and the pale buff of corinth. In the 5th century attic fine pottery now predominantly red figure maintained its dominance in the markets. 19 july 2004 published online. 1 march 2004 revised.
Eight attic pottery sherds six from paros att i to 6 one from athens lio 9 and one. Technology of production of red figure pottery from attic and southern italian workshops received.