Pottery - definitie. Wat is Pottery
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Wat (wie) is Pottery - definitie

CRAFT OF MAKING OBJECTS FROM CLAY
Fine art pot; Pottery and porcelain; Clay body; Pottery firing; Ceramics art; Ceramic ware; Ceramic wares; Ceramicware; Making a pot; Vase painting; Clay pottery; Whiteware; Pot throwing; Pottery-making; Pottery making; Ceramic pot; Pottery manufacture; Art ware; Ceramic paint; Clay pot; Painted vase; History of pottery; Environmental impact of pottery production; Potter (occupation); History of African pottery
  • Denby]]
  • glazes]] over a white glaze, [[Iran]], first half of the 19th century.
  • Two press moulds, with modern casts from them, Athens, 5–4th centuries BC
  • Small agateware barrel. England, 1880–1900
  • red-figure]] vase in the [[krater]] shape, between 470 and 460 BC, by the [[Altamura Painter]]
  • A potter using a potters wheel describes his materials (in Romanian and English)
  • Handpainted bone china cup. England, 1815–1820
  • A potter shaping a Bankura horse
  • Contemporary earthenware coffee mug
  • A [[bottle kiln]]
  • [[Chantilly porcelain]] teapot, c. 1730, with [[chinoiserie]] decoration in [[overglaze enamels]]
  • Charles II]] in the [[Boscobel Oak]]
  • Preparation of clay for pottery in India
  • A red glazed earthenware coffee mug
  • Applying a [[lithograph]], or decal to a plate. The yellow is the backing material, with the red the design
  • A modern tunnel kiln
  • A jigger
  • Group of 13th-century pieces of [[Longquan celadon]]
  • 15th-century Japanese [[stoneware]] storage jar, with partial [[ash glaze]]
  • An Incipient [[Jōmon]] pottery vessel reconstructed from fragments (10,000–8,000 BC), [[Tokyo National Museum]], Japan
  • Doulton]]. England, 1875
  • Glazed and decorated biscuit ware on a kiln car prior to being pushed into the glost kiln
  • Ash glazed jar from 9th century Japan
  • [[Late Neolithic]] [[Manunggul Jar]] from [[Palawan]] used for burial, topped with two figures representing the journey of the soul into the afterlife.
  • A section cut-through of ball mill, which are widely used to mill raw materials for pottery
  • German potter, 1605
  • date=April 2023}}</ref>
  • Earthenware 
jar from the [[Neolithic]] [[Majiayao culture]] China, 3300 to 2000 BCE
  • The pottery market in [[Boubon]], Niger
  • Close-up of a crystalline glaze
  • Sketch of a potter using a kick wheel
  • Pottery bowl from [[Jarmo]], [[Mesopotamia]], 7100–5800 BC.
  • Pottery firing mound in [[Kalabougou]], [[Mali]]. Much of the earliest pottery would have been fired in a similar fashion
  • Hand painting a vase
  • [[Terracotta Army]] following excavation
  • Faience lotiform chalice. Egypt 1070–664 BCE (reconstructed from eight fragments)
  • Filling a plaster mould with slip
  • Terra sigillata bowl. Roman, 1st century AD
  • Earthenware effigy of the Sun God. Maya culture, 500–700 CE
  • Stacking a bung of saggars at Sèvres
  • Jiggering a plate
  • Attaching a handle to an unfired mug
  • Clay body being extruded from a de-airing pug
  • Removing a filter cake of porcelain body from a filter press
  • Burnishing a plate's gold decoration
  • Sèvres]]
  • De-moulding a large vase after it has been slip cast
  • Spraying glaze onto a vase
  • Dipping a plate in a glaze suspension
  • Porcelain tableware
  • Hand building a jar
  • 1550–1600}}
  • Earthenware Ubaid jar. c. 5,300-4,700 BCE
  • Vessel made by the [[Mangbetu people]] in the early 1900s
  • Burnished redware vessel of a dog. Mexico, 100BCE-300CE
  • Earliest known ceramics are the [[Gravettian]] figurines that date to 29,000 to 25,000 BC.
  • Carved earthenware vessel. Mayan, 600–900 CE
  • Archaeologist cleaning an early mediaeval pottery sherd from [[Chodlik]], Poland.

Pottery         
·noun The place where earthen vessels are made.
II. Pottery ·noun The vessels or ware made by potters; earthenware, glazed and baked.
pottery         
n. to glaze pottery
pottery         
¦ noun (plural potteries) pots, dishes, and other articles made of fired clay.
?the craft or profession of making such ware.
?a factory or workshop where such ware is made.
Origin
ME: from OFr. poterie, from potier 'a potter'.

Wikipedia

Pottery

Pottery is the process and the products of forming vessels and other objects with clay and other raw materials, which are fired at high temperatures to give them a hard and durable form. The place where such wares are made by a potter is also called a pottery (plural potteries). The definition of pottery, used by the ASTM International, is "all fired ceramic wares that contain clay when formed, except technical, structural, and refractory products". End applications include tableware, decorative ware, sanitaryware, and in technology and industry such as electrical insulators and laboratory ware. In art history and archaeology, especially of ancient and prehistoric periods, pottery often means vessels only, and sculpted figurines of the same material are called terracottas.

Pottery is one of the oldest human inventions, originating before the Neolithic period, with ceramic objects such as the Gravettian culture Venus of Dolní Věstonice figurine discovered in the Czech Republic dating back to 29,000–25,000 BC, and pottery vessels that were discovered in Jiangxi, China, which date back to 18,000 BC. Early Neolithic and pre-Neolithic pottery artifacts have been found, in Jōmon Japan (10,500 BC), the Russian Far East (14,000 BC), Sub-Saharan Africa (9,400 BC), South America (9,000s–7,000s BC), and the Middle East (7,000s–6,000s BC).

Pottery is made by forming a clay body into objects of a desired shape and heating them to high temperatures (600–1600 °C) in a bonfire, pit or kiln, which induces reactions that lead to permanent changes including increasing the strength and rigidity of the object. Much pottery is purely utilitarian, but some can also be regarded as ceramic art. An article can be decorated before or after firing.

Pottery is traditionally divided into three types: earthenware, stoneware and porcelain. All three may be glazed and unglazed. All may also be decorated by various techniques. In many examples the group a piece belongs to is immediately visually apparent, but this is not always the case; for example fritware uses no or little clay, so falls outside these groups. Historic pottery of all these types is often grouped as either "fine" wares, relatively expensive and well-made, and following the aesthetic taste of the culture concerned, or alternatively "coarse", "popular", "folk" or "village" wares, mostly undecorated, or simply so, and often less well-made.

Cooking in pottery became less popular once metal pots became available, but is still used for dishes that benefit from the qualities of pottery cooking, typically slow cooking in an oven, such as biryani, cassoulet, daube, tagine, jollof rice, kedjenou, cazuela and types of baked beans.

Voorbeelden uit tekstcorpus voor Pottery
1. The delegation visited Binh Duong pottery village âЂ« one of the biggest pottery production establishments in Vietnam. (VNA)
2. For kitsch communist pottery and pretty birdcages.
3. They include cliff dwellings, petroglyphs, stone tools and pottery.
4. His pottery palace guard stands testimony to that.
5. Large pottery jars, some cracked, lined the chamber.