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Οι ιστοσελίδες είναι υπό κατασκευή. Η ελληνική
έκδοση θα είναι σύντομα διαθέσιμη.
The lost secrets of Classical Athenian vases
Rise and fall of a technique
Ancient ceramic art and technology reached its apogee in Athenian
workshops during the 6th-5th centuries BC. During this period the
artistic and technological quality of the fired black and red figure
vases reached perfection. It was only natural that such perfection
had to be witnessed and established by the application of the creator's
signature of which we have over 100 examples. We also witness the
emergence of schools and workshops which applied signatures as trade
marks and guarantees of quality. The incised mark ΝΙΚΟΣΘΕΝΗΣ ΕΠΟΙΗΣΕΝ
is the classical precursor of the marks and signatures of the great
European workshops of the last few centuries. The products of Athenian
workshops were in great demand throughout the Mediterranean markets
from Etruria and South Italy, to Carthage, Egypt and the coasts
of Anatolia (Asia Minor). The Attic black and red figure vases served
as aesthetic and technological reference points for the objects
of domestic and decorative usage in very much the same way as the
products of the great names of European pottery and glass making
(i.e. Wedgwood, Sevres, Limoges, Meissen, Galle, Lalique).
The decay of the social and economic fabric of Athens which followed
the Peloponnesian war marks the beginning of a long period of gradual
deterioration of both aesthetic and technological standards, the
appearance of lower quality imitations and finally during the Roman
period the complete abandonment of the technique. This was the end
of the iron reduction technique, the most widespread process for
decorating ceramics which lasted more than 2500 years. Present day
copies which are sold in tourist markets are painted over and bear
no relation to the techniques of the Classical period.
The rediscovery
The
aesthetic interest in Classical antiquity which followed the Renaissance
led to an active search for the lost technique of the so-called
ATTIC BLACK GLAZE. In 1752 le Comte de Caylus published a treatise
in France where he describes the glaze as "basically ferruginous
earth". Fifteen years later Josiah Wedgwood, after failing
to reproduce the glaze he produced the famous "black basalt"
substitutes, decorated in the red-figured style to celebrate the
opening of his factory at Etruria (Staffordshire).
During the next two centuries chemists, archaeologists and ceramists
met with the same difficulties to reproduce the Attic BG devoting
articles and treatises to the subject. Schumann (1942), Winter (1959)
and Hoffman (1962) in Germany as well as Noble (1966) in the USA
attempted to overcome similar difficulties by introducing "exotic"
additives such as urine, dregs of wine, blood, bone powder, and
wood or seaweed ashes. The definitive answer to the mystery was
provided in 1993 by Aloupi in Greece in the course of her PhD research
on the "Nature and Micromorphology of paint layers in ancient
ceramics". The key to the technique lies in the use of carefully
chosen and laboriously processed natural clays in water, followed
by a rather complex firing cycle during which the clay based paints
acquire their final black or red colour depending on the kiln temperature
and atmosphere. The result is a ceramic object whose colour, texture,
chemical composition and microstructure are indistinguishable from
the original. This process forms the basis of the THETIS 'fired
black' Ceramic Collection.
Relevant texts
Museum Quality ancient ceramic replicas 
Beware the fakes, frauds and reproductions 
References
Aloupi, 1993, Nature
and Micromorphology of paint layers in ancient ceramics (in
greek)
de Caylus, Comte, 1752, Receuil des Antiquites Egyptienes, Etrusques
et Romaines, Vol. 1
Hoffmann, 1952, Die chemischen Grundlagen der griechischen Vasenmalerei
Noble, 1964, The techniques of painted Attic pottery
Schumann, 1942, Oberflachenverzierung in der antiken opferkunst.
Winter, 1957, Die technik des griechischen Topfers in ihrem Grundlagen,
Mainz
(C)2004, THETIS authentics Ltd
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