Dictionary Definition
pottery
Noun
1 ceramic ware made from clay and baked in a kiln
[syn: clayware]
2 the craft of making earthenware
3 a workshop where clayware is made
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
pottery (uncountable in most senses)- all fired ceramic wares that contain clay when formed
- The shelves were lined with pottery of all shapes and sizes.
- (countable, plural potteries) a workshop where pottery is made
- I visited the old potteries and saw the pots being made.
- the craft of making pots from clay
- Bernard Leach was skilled at pottery.
Synonyms
Hyponyms
Translations
all fired ceramic wares that contain clay when
formed
- Finnish: keramiikka, savitavara
- German: Töpferware
- Greek: κεραμικά (keramiká)
- Japanese: 陶器
- Portuguese: cerâmica
- Russian: гончарные изделия (gončárnyje izd'élija) p, керамика (k'erámika)
- Spanish: cerámica, loza
- Swedish: keramik
workshop where pottery is made
- Finnish: keramiikkapaja
- German: Töpferei
- Japanese: 窯元
- Portuguese: olaria
- Russian: гончаная мастерская (gončárnaja mast'erskája) керамика (k'erámika)
- Spanish: alfarería
- Swedish: keramikverkstad, keramisk verkstad
practise or craft of making pots
- Czech: hrnčířství
- German: Töpferei
- Greek: αγγειοπλαστική (angeioplastikí), κεραμική (keramikí)
- Japanese: 陶芸
- Spanish: alfarería
Extensive Definition
Pottery is the ceramic ware made by potters. It
also refers to a group of materials that includes earthenware, stoneware, and porcelain. The places where
such wares are made are called potteries.
Background
Pottery is made by forming a clay body into objects of a required shape and heating them to high temperatures in a kiln to induce reactions that lead to permanent changes, including increasing their strength and hardening and setting their shape. There are wide regional variations in the properties of clays used by potters and this often helps to produce wares that are unique in character to a locality. It is common for clays and other minerals to be mixed to produce clay bodies suited to specific purposes; for example, a clay body that remains slightly porous after firing is often used for making earthenware or terra cotta flower-pots.Prior to most shaping processes, air trapped
within the clay body needs to be removed. This is called de-airing
and can be accomplished by a machine called a vacuum pug, or
manually by wedging.
Wedging can also help to ensure an even moisture content throughout
the body. Once clay body has been de-aired or wedged, it is shaped
by a variety of techniques. After shaping it is dried before
firing. There are a number of stages in the drying process.
Leather-hard refers to the stage when the clay object is
approximately 75-85% dry. Trimming and handle attachment often
occurs at the leather-hard state. A clay object is said to be
"bone-dry" when it reaches a moisture content at or near 0%.
Unfired objects are often termed greenware.
Methods of shaping
The potter's most basic tools are the hand, but many additional tools have been developed over the long history of pottery manufacture, including the potter's wheel and turntable, shaping tools (paddles, anvils, ribs), rolling tools (roulettes, slab rollers, rolling pins), cutting/piercing tools (knives, fluting tools, wires) and finishing tools (burnishing stones, rasps, chamois).Pottery can be shaped by a range of methods that
include: Handwork or handbuilding. This is the earliest and the
most individualized and direct forming method. Wares can be
constructed by hand from coils of clay, from flat slabs of clay,
from solid balls of clay — or some combination of these. Parts of
hand-built vessels are often joined together with the aid of
slurry or slip, a runny
mixture of clay and water. Handbuilding is slower and more gradual
than wheel-throwing, but it offers the potter a high degree of
control over the size and shape of wares. While it isn't difficult
for an experienced potter to make identical pieces of hand-built
pottery, the speed and repetitiveness of wheel-throwing is more
suitable for making precisely matched sets of wares such as
table
wares. Some potters find handbuilding more conducive to fully
using the imagination to create one-of-a-kind works of art, while other potters find the
spontaneity and immediacy of wheel-thrown pottery as their source
of inspiration.
The potter's wheel. A ball of clay is placed in
the center of a turntable, called the wheel-head, which the potter
rotates with a stick, or with foot power (a kick wheel or treadle wheel) or with a
variable speed electric
motor. (Often, a disk of plastic, wood or plaster — called a
bat — is first set on the wheel-head, and the ball of clay is
thrown on the bat rather than the wheel-head so that the finished
piece can be removed intact with its bat, without
distortion.)
During the process of throwing the wheel rotates
rapidly while the solid ball of soft clay is pressed, squeezed, and
pulled gently upwards and outwards into a hollow shape. The first
step, of pressing the rough ball of clay downward and inward into
perfect rotational
symmetry, is called centering the clay, a most important (and
often most difficult) skill to master before the next steps:
opening (making a centered hollow into the solid ball of clay),
flooring (making the flat or rounded bottom inside the pot),
throwing or pulling (drawing up and shaping the walls to an even
thickness), and trimming or turning (removing excess clay to refine
the shape or to create a foot).
The potter's wheel can be used for mass
production, although it is often employed to make individual
pieces. Wheel-work makes great demands on the skill of the potter,
but an accomplished operator can make many near to identically
similar plates, vases, or bowls in the course of a day's work.
Because of its inherent limitations, wheel-work can only be used to
create wares with radial
symmetry on a vertical
axis. These can then be altered by impressing, bulging,
carving, fluting,
faceting, incising, and by other methods
making the wares more visually interesting. Often, thrown pieces
are further modified by having handles, lids, feet, spouts, and
other functional aspects added using the techniques of
handworking.
Jiggering and
jolleying:
These operations are carried out on the potter's wheel and allow
the time taken to bring wares to a standardised form to be reduced.
Jiggering is the operation of bringing a shaped tool into contact
with the plastic clay of a piece under construction, the piece
itself being set on a rotating plaster mould on the wheel. The
jigger tool shapes one face whilst the mould shapes the other.
Jiggering is used only in the production of flat wares, such as
plates, but a similar operation, jolleying, is used in the
production of hollow-wares, such as cups. Jiggering and jolleying
have been used in the production of pottery since at least the
18th
century. In large-scale factory production jiggering and
jolleying are usually automated, which allows the operations to be
carried out by semi-skilled labour.
Roller-head
machine: This machine is for shaping wares on a rotating mould,
as in jiggering and jolleying, but with a rotary shaping tool replacing the
fixed profile. The rotary shaping tool is a shallow cone having the
same diameter as the ware being formed and shaped to the desired
form of the back of the article being made. Wares may in this way
be shaped, using relatively unskilled labour, in one operation at a
rate of about twelve pieces per minute, though this varies with the
size of the articles being produced. The roller-head machine is now
used in factories world-wide.
RAM
pressing: A factory process for shaping table wares and
decorative ware by pressing a bat of prepared clay body into a
required shape between two porous moulding plates. After pressing,
compressed air is blown through the porous mould plates to release
the shaped wares.
Granulate pressing: As the name suggests, this is
the operation of shaping pottery by pressing clay in a semi-dry and
granulated condition in a mould.
The clay is pressed into the mould by a porous die through which
water is pumped at high pressure. The granulated
clay is prepared by spray-drying to produce a fine and free flowing
material having a moisture content of between about five and six
per cent. Granulate pressing, also known as dust pressing, is
widely used in the manufacture of ceramic
tiles and, increasingly, of plates.
Slipcasting: is
often used in the mass-production of ceramics and is ideally suited
to the making of wares that cannot be formed by other methods of
shaping. A slip,
made by mixing clay body
with water, is poured into a highly absorbent plaster mould. Water
from the slip is absorbed into the mould leaving a layer of
clay body covering its
internal surfaces and taking its internal shape. Excess slip is
poured out of the mould, which is then split open and the moulded
object removed. Slipcasting is widely used in the production of
sanitary wares and is also used for making smaller articles, such
as intricately-detailed figurines.
Glazing and decorating
Pottery may be decorated in a number of ways, including:- In the clay body; by, for example, incising patterns on its surface.
- Underglaze decoration, in the manner of many blue and white wares.
- In-glaze decoration
- On-glaze decoration
- Enamel
Additives can be worked into the clay body prior
to forming, to produce desired effects in the fired wares. Coarse
additives, such as sand and grog (fired
clay which has been finely ground) are sometimes used to give the
final product a required texture. Contrasting colored clays and
grogs are sometimes used to produce patterns in the finished wares.
Colorants, usually metal oxides and carbonates, are added singly or
in combination to achieve a desired colour. Combustible particles
can be mixed with the body or pressed into the surface to produce
texture.
Agateware:
So-named after its resemblance to the quartz mineral agate which has bands or layers of
colour that are blended together. Agatewares are made by blending
clays of differing colours together, but not mixing them to the
extent that they lose their individual identities. The wares have a
distinctive veined or mottled
appearance. The term 'agateware' is used to describe such wares in
the United
Kingdom; in Japan the term
neriage is used and in China, where such
things have been made since at least the Tang
Dynasty, they are called marbled wares. Great care is required
in the selection of clays to be used for making agatewares as the
clays used must have matching thermal movement
characteristics.
Banding: This is
the application, by hand or by machine, of a band of colour to the
edge of a plate or cup. Also known as lining, this operation is
often carried out on a potter's wheel.
Burnishing: The
surface of pottery wares may be burnished prior to firing by
rubbing with a suitable instrument of wood, steel or stone, to
produce a polished finish that survives firing. It is possible to
produce very highly polished wares when fine clays are used, or
when the polishing is carried out on wares that have been partially
dried and contain little water, though wares in this condition are
extremely fragile and the risk of breakage is high.
Engobe: This is
a clay
slip, often white or cream in colour, that is used to coat the
surface of pottery, usually before firing. Its purpose is often
decorative, though it can also be used to mask undesirable features
in the clay to which it is applied. Engobe slip may be applied by
painting or by dipping, to provide a uniform, smooth, coating.
Engobe has been used by potters from pre-historic times until the
present day, and is sometimes combined with sgraffito decoration, where a
layer of engobe is scratched through to reveal the colour of the
underlying clay. With care it is possible to apply a second coat of
engobe of a different colour to the first and to incise decoration
through the second coat to expose the colour of the underlying
coat. Engobes used in this way often contain substantial amounts of
silica, sometimes
approaching the composition of a glaze.
Litho: This is a commonly used abbreviation for
lithography,
although the alternative names of transfer
print or decal are also common. These are used to apply designs
to articles. The litho comprises three layers: the colour, or
image, layer which comprises the decorative design; the covercoat,
a clear protective layer, which may incorporate a low-melting
glass; and the backing paper on which the design is printed by
screen printing or lithography. There are various methods of
transferring the design while removing the backing-paper, some of
which are suited to machine application
Gold: Decoration with gold is used on some high
quality ware. Different methods exist for its application,
including:
- Best gold - a suspension of gold powder in essential oils mixed with a flux and a mercury salt extended. This can be applied by a painting technique. From the kiln the decoration is dull and requires burnishing to reveal the full colour
- Acid Gold – a form of gold decoration developed in the early 1860s at the English factory of Mintons Ltd, Stoke-on-Trent. The glazed surface is etched with diluted hydrofluoric acid prior to application of the gold. The process demands great skill and is used for the decoration only of ware of the highest class.
- Bright Gold – consists of a solution of gold sulphoresinate together with other metal resinates and a flux. The name derives from the appearance of the decoration immediately after removal from the kiln as it requires no burnishing
- Mussel Gold – an old method of gold decoration. It was made by rubbing together gold leaf, sugar and salt, followed by washing to remove solubles
Glazing
Glaze is a glassy coating applied to pottery, the primary purposes of which include decoration and protection. Glazes are highly variable in composition but usually comprise a mixture of ingredients that generally, but not always, mature at kiln temperatures lower than that of the pottery that it coats. One important use of glaze is in rendering pottery vessels impermeable to water and other liquids. Glaze may be applied by dusting it over the clay, spraying, dipping, trailing or brushing on a thin slurry composed of glaze minerals and water. Brushing tends not to give an even covering but can be effective as a decorative technique. The colour of a glaze before it has been fired may be significantly different than afterwards. To prevent glazed wares sticking to kiln furniture during firing, either a small part of the object being fired (for example, the foot) is left unglazed or, alternatively, special refractory spurs are used as supports. These are removed and discarded after the firing. Special methods of glazing are sometimes carried out in the kiln. One example is salt-glazing, where common salt is introduced to the kiln to produce a glaze of mottled, orange peel texture. Materials other than salt are also used to glaze wares in the kiln, including sulphur. In wood-fired kilns fly-ash from the fuel can produce ash-glazing on the surface of wares.Firing
Firing produces irreversible changes in the body. It is only after firing that the article can be called pottery. In lower-fired pottery the changes include sintering, the fusing together of coarser particles in the body at their points of contact with each other. In the case of porcelain, where different materials and higher firing-temperatures are used the physical, chemical and mineralogical properties of the constituents in the body are greatly altered. In all cases the object of firing is to permanently harden the wares and the firing regime must be appropriate to the materials used to make them. As rough guide, earthenwares are normally fired at temperatures in the range of about 1000 to 1200 degrees Celsius; stonewares at between about 1100 to 1300 degrees Celsius; and porcelains at between about 1200 to 1400 degrees Celsius. However, the way that ceramics mature in the kiln is influenced not only by the peak temperature achieved, but also by the duration of the period of firing. Thus, the maximum temperature within a kiln is often held constant for a period of time to soak the wares, to produce the maturity required in the body of the wares.The atmosphere within a kiln during firing can
affect the appearance of the finished wares. An oxidising
atmosphere, produced by allowing air to enter the kiln, can cause
the oxidation of clays
and glazes. A reducing atmosphere, produced by limiting the flow of
air into the kiln, can strip oxygen from the surface of clays and
glazes. This can affect the appearance of the wares being fired
and, for example, some glazes containing iron fire brown in an oxidising
atmosphere, but green in a reducing atmosphere. The atmosphere
within a kiln can be adjusted to produce complex effects in
glaze.
Kilns may be heated by burning wood, coal and gas, or by electricity. When used as
fuels, coal and wood can introduce smoke, soot and ash into the
kiln which can affect the appearance of unprotected wares. For this
reason wares fired in wood- or coal-fired kilns are often placed in
the kiln in saggars;
lidded ceramic boxes, to protect them. Modern kilns powered by gas
or electricity are cleaner and more easily controlled than older
wood- or coal-fired kilns and often allow shorter firing times to
be used. In a Western adaptation of traditional Japanese Raku ware
firing, wares are removed from the kiln while hot and smothered in
ashes, paper or woodchips, which produces a distinctive, carbonised, appearance.
This technique is also used in Malaysia in creating traditional
labu
sayung.
History
It is believed that the earliest pottery wares were hand-built and fired in bonfires. Firing times were short but the peak-temperatures achieved in the fire could be high, perhaps in the region of 900 degrees Celsius, and were reached very quickly. Clays tempered with sand, grit, crushed shell or crushed pottery were often used to make bonfire-fired ceramics, because they provided an open body texture that allows water and other volatile components of the clay to escape freely. The coarser particles in the clay also acted to restrain shrinkage within the bodies of the wares during cooling, which was carried out slowly to reduce the risk of thermal stress and cracking. In the main, early bonfire-fired wares were made with rounded bottoms, to avoid sharp angles that might be susceptible to cracking. The earliest intentionally constructed kilns were pit-kilns or trench-kilns; holes dug in the ground and covered with fuel. Holes in the ground provided insulation and resulted in better control over firing.The earliest known ceramic objects are Gravettian
figurines such as those discovered at Dolni Vestonice in the
modern-day Czech
Republic. The
Venus of Dolní Věstonice (Věstonická Venuše in Czech) is a
Venus figurine, a statuette of a nude female figure dated to
29,000–25,000 BCE (Gravettian industry). The earliest known pottery
vessels may be those made by the Incipient Jōmon people of Japan
around 10,500 BCE . The term "Jōmon" means
"cord-marked" in Japanese. This refers to the markings made on clay
vessels and figures using sticks with cords wrapped around them.
Pottery which dates back to 10,000 BCE have also been excavated in
China. It
appears that pottery was independently developed in North Africa during the
tenth millennium b.p. and in South
America during the seventh millennium b.p.
The invention of the potter's
wheel in Mesopotamia
sometime between 6,000 and 4,000 BCE (Ubaid
period) revolutionized pottery production. Specialized potters
were then able to meet the expanding needs of the world's first
cities. Pottery was in use in ancient
India during the Mehrgarh Period II
(5500 -
4800 BCE) and
Merhgarh Period III (4800 - 3500 BCE), known as
the ceramic Neolithic and chalcolithic. Pottery,
including items known as the ed-Dur vessels, originated in regions
of the Indus valley and has been found in a number of sites in the
Indus
valley civilization.
In the Mediterranean, during the Greek Dark
Ages (1100–800
BCE), artists used geometric designs such as squares, circles
and lines to decorate amphoras and other pottery. The
period between 1500-300 BCE in ancient Korea is known as the
Mumun
Pottery Period.
The quality of pottery has varied historically,
in part dependent upon the repute in which the potter's craft was
held by the community. For example, in the Chalcolithic
period in Mesopotamia,
Halafian
pottery achieved a level of technical competence and
sophistication, not seen until the later developments of Greek
pottery with Corinthian and Attic ware.
The distinctive Red Samian ware
of the Early Roman Empire
was copied by regional potters throughout the Empire. The Dark Age period
saw a collapse in the quality of European pottery which did not
recover in status and quality until the European
Renaissance.
In Popular Culture
John Keats wrote a poem about a Grecian urn called "Ode on a Grecian Urn."Pottery and archaeology
For archaeologists, anthropologists, and historians the study of pottery can help to provide an insight into past cultures. Pottery is durable and fragments, at least, often survive long after artifacts made from less-durable materials have decayed past recognition. Combined with other evidence, the study of pottery artifacts is helpful in the development of theories on the organisation, economic condition and the cultural development of the societies that produced or acquired pottery. The study of pottery may also allow inferences to be drawn about a culture's daily life, religion, social relationships, attitudes towards neighbours, attitudes to their own world and even the way the culture understood the universe.Chronologies based on pottery are often essential
for dating non-literate cultures and are often of help in the
dating of historic cultures as well. Trace element analysis, mostly
by neutron
activation, allows the sources of clay to be accurately
identified and the thermoluminescence
test can be used to provide an estimate of the date of last firing.
Examining fired pottery shards from prehistory, scientists learned
that during high-temperature firing, iron materials in clay record
the exact state of Earth's magnetic field at that exact
moment.
Miscellany
Due to the large number of pottery factories, or colloquially, 'Pot Banks', the city of Stoke-on-Trent in England became known as The Potteries, one of the first industrial cities of the modern era where, as early as 1785, two hundred pottery manufacturers employed 20,000 workers.The Potters is the nickname of the local football
club, Stoke City
F.C..
Notes
References
- ASTM Standard C 242-01 Standard Terminology of Ceramic Whitewares and Related Products
- Ashmore, Wendy & Sharer, Robert J., (2000). Discovering Our Past: A Brief Introduction to Archaeology Third Edition. Mountain View, California: Mayfield Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0072978827
- Barnett, William & Hoopes, John (Eds.) (1995). The Emergence of Pottery. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 1-56098-517-8
- Childe, V. G., (1951). Man Makes Himself. London: Watts & Co.
- P.Rado. An Introduction To The Technology Of Pottery. 2nd edition. Pergamon Press. 1988
- W.Ryan & C.Radford.Whitewares: Production, Testing And Quality Control. Pergamon Press. 1987
- Hamer, Frank and Janet. (1991). The Potter's Dictionary of Materials and Techniques, Third Edition. London: A & C Black Publishers. ISBN 0-8122-3112-0.
- Rice, Prudence M. (1987). Pottery Analysis – A Sourcebook. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-71118-8.
- http://historynet.com/bh/bl-staffordshire-potteries/
See also
- List of pottery terms
- Anagama kiln
- Arts and Crafts movement
- Asbestos-Ceramic
- Bone china
- Celadon
- Ceramic
- Ceramics (art)
- Chinese porcelain
- Delftware
- Dipped ware
- Earthenware
- Faience
- Fiestaware
- Glaze defects
- History of pottery in Palestine
- Iranian pottery
- Jasperware
- Kakiemon pottery
- Longquan celadon
- Maiolica of Renaissance Italy
- Native American pottery
- Pit fired pottery
- Poole Pottery
- Porcelain
- Pottery of Ancient Greece
- Raku ware
- Rockingham Pottery
- Royal Doulton — Henry Doulton, John Doulton
- Sancai
- Saggar fired pottery
- Salt glaze pottery
- Slipware
- Stoneware
- Staffordshire Potteries
- Studio pottery
- Wedgwood — Enoch Wedgwood, Josiah Wedgwood
- Victorian majolica
- Vietnamese pottery
- Yixing pottery
External links
- How pottery is made
- Neolithic Pottery Manufacture
- Pottery manufacture in recent past
- A brief history of the pottery industry
- Pottery-related objects and photographs to explore online
- Customs and Working Practices of a Victorian Pottery
- Short film on pottery making around the world
- Step-by-step throwing instructions
- Auckland Studio Potters New Zealand
pottery in Arabic: فخار
pottery in Bulgarian: Грънчарство
pottery in Catalan: Terrissa
pottery in German: Töpferei
pottery in Spanish: Alfarería
pottery in Esperanto: Ceramiko
pottery in Persian: سفالگری
pottery in French: Poterie
pottery in Zulu: Ukhamba
pottery in Hebrew: קדרות
pottery in Hungarian: kerámia
pottery in Indonesian: Kerajinan pot
pottery in Icelandic: Leirkeragerð
pottery in Dutch: Pottenbakken
pottery in Norwegian: Keramikk
pottery in Japanese: 土器
pottery in Uighur: ساپلا ئەسۋاب
pottery in Polish: Garncarstwo
pottery in Portuguese: Cerâmica
pottery in Russian: Гончарное производство
pottery in Simple English: Pottery
pottery in Slovak: Hrnčiarstvo
pottery in Slovenian: Lončarstvo
pottery in Serbian: Грнчар
pottery in Swedish: Krukmakeri
pottery in Telugu: కుమ్మరి
pottery in Thai: เครื่องปั้นดินเผา
pottery in Turkish: Çömlekçilik
pottery in Ukrainian: Гончарство
pottery in Chinese: 陶器
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
adobe,
armory, arsenal, assembly line, assembly
plant, atomic energy plant, bindery, biscuit, bisque, boatyard, boilery, bookbindery, bowl, brewery, brick, brickyard, cannery, cement, ceramic ware, ceramics, china, creamery, crock, crockery, dairy, defense plant, distillery, dockyard, earthenware, enamelware, factory, factory belt, factory
district, feeder plant, firebrick, flour mill,
glass, industrial park,
industrial zone, jug, main
plant, manufactory,
manufacturing plant, manufacturing quarter, mill, mint, munitions plant, oil
refinery, packing house, plant, porcelain, pot, power plant, production line,
push-button plant, refinery, refractory, sawmill, shipyard, stoneware, subassembly plant,
sugar refinery, tannery,
tile, tiling, urn, vase, winery, yard, yards