Pot with Whorl Design – Japanese
Japanese-10500/-0300
该作品的收藏者:
This pot dates to the middle of the Jomon period (c. 3000–2000 BC), which was Japan's Neolithic era. Jomon translates to "vines or cords," and the period gets its name from the swirling decorative motifs often found on earthenware storage and cooking vessels produced during that time.
Like most examples of Jomon ceramics, Pot with Whorl Design is fashioned from unwashed clay and still contains pebbles, shells, and bits of gravel. Jomon potters aimed to work with the natural elements and thus made no effort to remove them. Instead of using a potter's wheel, the artisans employed a hand-building method of layering coil upon coil of soft clay and molding vessels from the bottom up. As was the case in many other Neolithic societies, women likely produced these early ceramic pieces.
作品介绍
- 标题: Pot with Whorl Design
- 创作者: Japanese
- 创作日期: -10500/-0300
- 实际尺寸: w33 x h37.5 cm (overall)
- Period: Jomon Period
- Credit Line: The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, museum purchase funded by the Museum Collectors
- 类型: Ceramic
- 外部链接: MFAH
- 材质: Earthenware
该作品收藏于:
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
原创文章,作者:lostcat,如若转载,请注明出处:http://culture.ceramicsj.com/2018/08/14/pot-with-whorl-design-japanese/