Pottery | Definition, History, & Facts | Britannica

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Britannica presents SpaceNext50, From the race to the Moon to space stewardship, we explore a wide range of subjects that feed our curiosity about space! pottery Table of Contents pottery Introduction Kinds, processes, and techniques Kinds of pottery Earthenware Stoneware Porcelain Forming processes and techniques Shaping the clay Drying, turning, and firing Decorating processes and techniques Impressing and stamping Incising, sgraffito, carving, and piercing Slip decorating Burnishing and polishing Decorative glazing Painting Transfer printing Marking Western pottery Ancient Near East and Egypt Ancient Aegean and Greece Bronze Age Early Bronze Age (c. 3000–2000 bce ) Middle Bronze Age (c. 2000–1500 bce ) Late Bronze Age (c. 1580–1100 bce ) Early Iron Age Geometric style Period of Oriental influence (c. 725–c. 600 bce ) Attic black-figure and red-figure Archaic period (c. 750–c. 480 bce ) Classical period (c. 480–c. 330 bce ) Hellenistic period (c. 330–c. 30 bce ) Etruscan and Roman Etruria Roman Empire Islamic Early Islamic Umayyad ʾAbbāsid Sāmānid Egyptian Mesopotamia and Persia 11th to 15th century Later Persian Syrian Turkish European: to the end of the 18th century Byzantium Spain Lustreware Other tin-glazed ware Porcelain Italy Majolica Sgraffito wares Porcelain France and Belgium Lead-glazed wares of the 16th century Faience, or tin-glazed ware Porcelain Germany and Austria Stoneware Tin-glazed ware Porcelain The Netherlands Britain Tin-glazed ware 17th-century slipware Stoneware 18th-century developments Porcelain Scandinavia Switzerland and Russia Colonial America 19th century Britain Porcelain Stoneware and earthenware The European continent The United States 20th century Pottery factories The artist-potter East Asian and Southeast Asian pottery China Tang dynasty (618–907 ce ) Song dynasty (960–1279 ce ) Yuan dynasty (1206–1368) Ming dynasty (1368–1644) Reign of the Xuande emperor (1425–35) Reign of the Chenghua emperor (1464–87) Reigns of the Hongzhi and Zhengde emperors (1487–1521) Reign of the Jiajing emperor (1521–1566/67) Reigns of the Longqing and Wanli emperors (1567–1620) Provincial and export wares Qing dynasty (1644–1911/12) Underglaze blue and red Coloured glazes Overglaze colours European influence and the export trade 19th and 20th centuries Korea Japan Kamakura and Muromachi periods (1192–1573) Azuchi-Momoyama period (1573–1600) Edo period (1603–1867) 19th and 20th centuries Thailand and Annam American Indian pottery North America Central America South America Fast Facts pottery summary Related Content Quizzes Media Videos Images More More Articles On This Topic Additional Reading Contributors Article History Home Visual Arts Decorative Art

pottery

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External Websites World History Encyclopedia - Pottery in Antiquity HistoryWorld - History of Pottery and Porcelain Purdue University - Women Artists of the American West - A History of American Indian Pottery Humanities LibreTexts - Pottery Britannica Websites Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students. pottery - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11) pottery and porcelain - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up) Print print Print Please select which sections you would like to print: Cite verified Cite While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions. Select Citation Style MLA APA Chicago Manual of Style Copy Citation Share Share Share to social media Facebook Twitter URL https://www.britannica.com/art/pottery Feedback External Websites Feedback Thank you for your feedback

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External Websites World History Encyclopedia - Pottery in Antiquity HistoryWorld - History of Pottery and Porcelain Purdue University - Women Artists of the American West - A History of American Indian Pottery Humanities LibreTexts - Pottery Britannica Websites Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students. pottery - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11) pottery and porcelain - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up) By George Savage Last Updated: Dec 17, 2022 Article History Table of Contents Hohokam pottery See all media Key People: Maria Martinez Pablo Picasso Eva Zeisel Dave the Potter Beatrice Wood (Show more) Related Topics: whiteware Greek pottery terra-cotta porcelain stoneware (Show more) See all related content Summary

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pottery , one of the oldest and most widespread of the decorative arts , consisting of objects made of clay and hardened with heat. The objects made are commonly useful ones, such as vessels for holding liquids or plates or bowls from which food can be served.

Kinds, processes, and techniques

Clay , the basic material of pottery, has two distinctive characteristics: it is plastic (i.e., it can be molded and will retain the shape imposed upon it); and it hardens on firing to form a brittle but otherwise virtually indestructible material that is not attacked by any of the agents that corrode metals or organic materials. Firing also protects the clay body against the effects of water. If a sun-dried clay vessel is filled with water, it will eventually collapse, but, if it is heated, chemical changes that begin to take place at about 900 °F (500 °C) preclude a return to the plastic state no matter how much water is later in contact with it. Clay is a refractory substance; it will vitrify only at temperatures of about 2,900 °F (1,600 °C). If it is mixed with a substance that will vitrify at a lower temperature (about 2,200 °F, or 1,200 °C) and the mixture is subjected to heat of this order, the clay will hold the object in shape while the other substance vitrifies. This forms a nonporous opaque body known as stoneware . When feldspar or soapstone (steatite) is added to the clay and exposed to a temperature of 2,000 to 2,650 °F (1,100 to 1,450 °C), the product becomes translucent and is known as porcelain . In this section, earthenware is used to denote all pottery substances that are not vitrified and are therefore slightly porous and coarser than vitrified materials.

The line of demarcation between the two classes of vitrified materials—stoneware and porcelain—is extremely vague. In the Western world, porcelain is usually defined as a translucent substance—when held to the light most porcelain does have this property—and stoneware is regarded as partially vitrified material that is not translucent. The Chinese, on the other hand, define porcelain as any ceramic material that will give a ringing tone when tapped. None of these definitions is completely satisfactory; for instance, some thinly potted stonewares are slightly translucent if they have been fired at a high temperature, whereas some heavily potted porcelains are opaque. Therefore, the application of the terms is often a matter of personal preference and should be regarded as descriptive, not definitive.

Kinds of pottery

Earthenware

creamware vase

Earthenware was the first kind of pottery made, dating back about 9,000 years. In the 21st century, it is still widely used.

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The earthenware body varies in colour from buff to dark red and from gray to black. The body can be covered or decorated with slip (a mixture of clay and water in a creamlike consistency, used for adhesive and casting as well as for decoration), with a clear glaze, or with an opaque tin glaze. Tin-glazed earthenware is usually called majolica , faience , or delft ( see below Decorative glazing ). If the clear-glazed earthenware body is a cream colour, it is called creamware . Much of the commercial earthenware produced beginning in the second half of the 20th century was heat- and cold-proof and could thus be used for cooking and freezing as well as for serving.

Stoneware

Stoneware is very hard and, although sometimes translucent, usually opaque. The colour of the body varies considerably; it can be red, brown, gray, white, or black.

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Fine white stoneware was made in China as early as 1400 bce ( Shang dynasty ). In Korea , stoneware was first made during the Silla dynasty (57 bce –935 ce ); in Japan , during the 13th century ( Kamakura period ). The first production of stoneware in Europe was in 16th-century Germany. When tea was first imported to Europe from China in the 17th century, each chest was accompanied by a red stoneware pot made at the Yixing kilns in Jiangsu province. This ware was copied in Germany , the Netherlands , and England . At the end of the 17th century, English potters made a salt-glazed white stoneware that was regarded by them as a substitute for porcelain ( see below Decorative glazing ). In the 18th century, the Englishman Josiah Wedgwood made a black stoneware called basaltes and a white stoneware (coloured with metallic oxides) called jasper . A fine white stoneware, called Ironstone china , was introduced in England early in the 19th century. In the 20th century, stoneware was used mostly by artist-potters, such as Bernard Leach and his followers.


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