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The life and work of the contemporary professional potter /Lehman, Mark Ammon. January 1994 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1994. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Justin Schorr. Dissertation Committee: William Mahoney. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 209-215).
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Beatrice Wood sophisticated primitive /Hennessey, Helen Dixon. Lhamon, W. T. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Florida State University, 2004. / Advisor: Dr. W.T. Lhamon, Jr., Florida State University, College of Arts and Sciences, Program in the Humanities. Title and description from dissertation home page (viewed May 19, 2005). Includes bibliographical references.
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Middle Cypriot White Painted Ware: A Study of Pottery Production and Distribution in Middle Bronze Age CyprusGagne, Laura 21 August 2012 (has links)
White Painted Ware, the most identifiable of pottery types of the Middle Bronze Age on Cyprus, has been studied by scholars either with the view to creating chronological typologies or to tracing trade routes. Little attention has been paid to the technology and social organization of production of this pottery. This thesis is concerned with the potters as much as with the pottery. The production sequence is examined from clay selection through to decoration of the vessels. An attempt is made to isolate production centres with unique methods of vessel construction as well as preferences for certain shapes and decorative schemes. Using petrographic analysis, different fabrics are isolated within the ware, and these are in turn related to the groups of vessels created based on style. Similar fabrics are used in multiple sites and most sites were found to have used multiple fabrics to create pottery that is considered to be part of the White Painted ware group. Beneath the major differences in styles between sites are several minor variations in construction method and decoration that are more likely to represent choices made by individual potters or small groups of potters working together. Based on vessel shape and decoration, seven distinct production centres appear to have been manufacturing White Painted ware on Cyprus over the course of the Middle Bronze Age. These were not operating simultaneously, but appear to have been active at the time that their regions were most prosperous, linking the production and use of White Painted ware with political and economic power.
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Middle Cypriot White Painted Ware: A Study of Pottery Production and Distribution in Middle Bronze Age CyprusGagne, Laura 21 August 2012 (has links)
White Painted Ware, the most identifiable of pottery types of the Middle Bronze Age on Cyprus, has been studied by scholars either with the view to creating chronological typologies or to tracing trade routes. Little attention has been paid to the technology and social organization of production of this pottery. This thesis is concerned with the potters as much as with the pottery. The production sequence is examined from clay selection through to decoration of the vessels. An attempt is made to isolate production centres with unique methods of vessel construction as well as preferences for certain shapes and decorative schemes. Using petrographic analysis, different fabrics are isolated within the ware, and these are in turn related to the groups of vessels created based on style. Similar fabrics are used in multiple sites and most sites were found to have used multiple fabrics to create pottery that is considered to be part of the White Painted ware group. Beneath the major differences in styles between sites are several minor variations in construction method and decoration that are more likely to represent choices made by individual potters or small groups of potters working together. Based on vessel shape and decoration, seven distinct production centres appear to have been manufacturing White Painted ware on Cyprus over the course of the Middle Bronze Age. These were not operating simultaneously, but appear to have been active at the time that their regions were most prosperous, linking the production and use of White Painted ware with political and economic power.
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A LouÃa de Barro no CÃrrego de Areia: tradiÃÃo, saberes e itinerÃrios.Francisca Raimunda Nogueira Mendes 26 June 2009 (has links)
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento CientÃfico e TecnolÃgico / A teia de relaÃÃes sociais que constitui a produÃÃo artesanal de louÃa de barro do CÃrrego de Areia, localidade no municÃpio de Limoeiro do Norte, CE revela a interaÃÃo das louceiras com instituiÃÃes como a Central de Artesanato do Cearà (Ceart), alÃm das feiras e dos compradores avulsos mostrando os vÃnculos
que elas tÃm com os poderes socialmente estabelecidos, ficiais, mas principalmente aponta para as polifonias existentes no interior do prÃprio lugar, onde questÃes de gÃnero, conflitos entre as famÃlias e interferÃncias de instituiÃÃes ultrapassam a dimensÃo fÃsica dos objetos. Fazer louÃa de barro nÃo à uma atividade que possa ser entendida apenas do ponto de vista comercial. Um olhar mais atento sobre o cotidiano da
produÃÃo apresenta as visÃes de mundo, o imaginÃrio, os arranjos sociais, enfim, a arte de quem a faz. Enquanto modelam seus objetos, os artesÃos moldam as prÃprias vidas, num processo constante de criaÃÃo e recriaÃÃo de seu universo
cultural particular. O dia obedece a uma continuidade de afazeres que sÃo organizados a partir das necessidades dos artesÃos, nÃo estando seu tempo subordinado ao relÃgio, como ocorre na produÃÃo industrial urbana. Portanto, a produÃÃo artesanal sà pode ser entendida se a consideramos como um palco de disputas por recursos pÃblicos, pelos bens materiais e, sobretudo, como pelos bens simbÃlicos, caracterizando assim uma luta pelo poder que à expressa no desenrolar do prÃprio cotidiano das louceiras. Apesar de serem conhecidas dentro e fora do CÃrrego de Areia, como âas louceirasâ, essas mulheres nÃo podem ser pensadas como uma categoria sÃ, que denote unidade, pois tÃm histÃrias de vida, visÃes de mundo e interesses
diversos, que as impedem de estabelecem uma identidade Ãnica. A observaÃÃo no cotidiano e as falas revelaram que diferentes identidades, guiadas por diferentes redes de sociabilidade descritas anteriormente, que orientam a aÃÃo social diÃria das louceiras.
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S. Routson's PotteryHageman, George L. January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Ancient potters in modern Veracruz, MexicoKrotser, Paula Homberger, 1913- January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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In the beginning was the word :Moon, Damon. Unknown Date (has links)
The years between 1940 and 1964 constitute a significant period of growth of ceramics as part of the burgeoning Australian crafts movement. This phase is linked with Bernard Leach's influential text, A Potter's Book, where the author assesses the impact of this work on Australian ceramics. / The post-war years in Australia brought increased scope for leisure, work and education. Greater numbers of people than ever before became involved, as participants or audience, with activities in the cultural sphere. A notable feature of this time was a resurgence of interest in the manual arts. These traditional skills, reconfigured within contemporary society as creative hobbies or art related activities, became part of a movement known as the Crafts. / Nowhere was this more noticeable than with hand-made pottery in its transition from an essential trade to a redundant but nonetheless widely practiced craft and in the attendant social, aesthetic and theoretical shifts necessary to accommodate these changes in value, status and intent. Of all the activities coming within the ambit of the crafts, pottery garnered the most public interest. More people made pottery, more was written about pottery, more galleries exhibited pottery and more people bought pottery than any of the other crafts. Pottery was taught in almost every school and it often was the only hand-craft taught at a tertiary level. In examining the transformation of Australian ceramics during this time one can isolate many factors that played a part, but underpinning much of this activity was a remarkably influential book, Bernard Leach’s 1940 publication ‘A Potter’s Book’. / Building on a legacy of cross-cultural borrowings, Leach may be credited with establishing Japan as the site of craft authenticity in the imagination of countless potters. Added to this is the significance of ‘A Potter’s Book’ as an invaluable technical aid, at a time when there was little practical information specifically tailored to the needs of the studio potter. / The years between 1940 and 1964 constitute a significant period in the growth of ceramics as part of the burgeoning Australian Crafts Movement. By concentrating on this crucial phase of Australian pottery and linking it to what was the most influential text in the field, a framework is created to assess the depth and variety of practice. / Looking at Australian Pottery through the structures and arguments set forth in ‘A Potter’s Book’, an assessment of the impact of this important work on Australian ceramics can be made that extends beyond the anecdotal. Despite the importance of Leach’s text and the unprecedented vitality of Australian pottery at the time, no significant analysis of the degree of connectivity between the two exists. This thesis hopes to contribute to a fuller understanding of this area of Australian craft history. / Thesis (PhD)--University of South Australia, 2006.
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Ogata Kenzan (1663-1743)Wilson, Richard L., January 1985 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Kansas, 1985. / eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 412-416).
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從工匠到藝術家: 二十世紀中國的美術陶瓷從業者. / From artisans to artists: ceramic workers in twentieth century China / 二十世紀中國的美術陶瓷從業者 / CUHK electronic theses & dissertations collection / Cong gong jiang dao yi shu jia: er shi shi ji Zhongguo de mei shu tao ci cong ye zhe. / Er shi shi ji Zhongguo de mei shu tao ci cong ye zheJanuary 2010 (has links)
The people making ceramics were considered as "artisans" (gongjiang) in traditional China. Classifying ceramics as an "art" (meishu) and potters as "artists", was a new development in the twentieth century. This thesis examines this process by comparing the experience of artisans from Jingdezhen, Jiangxi province, in which the imperial kilns (yuyao) were located, and from Shiwan, Guangdong province, where only civilian kilns (minyao) were found. / This thesis argues their different historical background led to the differences in their different experience. The reputation of Jingdezhen's world famous "imperial kilns" lasted into the twentieth century, and so, as Jingdezhen was subject to industrial development and technological upgrading, Jingdezhen's craftsmen came from the new technical schools which were founded to revive the ceramic industry. In Shiwan, by contrast, apprenticeship to reputable craftsmen continued to serve as artistic credential, and was made use of by patrons, commentators and publicists in promoting Shiwan's artistic tradition. / 黎麗明. / Adviser: David Faure. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 73-03, Section: A, page: . / Thesis (Ph.D.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 2010. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 178-192) / Electronic reproduction. Hong Kong : Chinese University of Hong Kong, [2012] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Electronic reproduction. [Ann Arbor, MI] : ProQuest Information and Learning, [201-] System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader. Available via World Wide Web. / Abstracts in Chinese and English. / Li Liming.
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