Légende
Fragment of a bowl, unknown Northern Mesopotamian workshop, painted pottery, geometric motifs, bowls, Near Eastern pottery, Eastern Gaulish Scene. Fragment of a bowl wall with a preserved thin rim edge and a transition to a flat, bottom. Before firing, the decoration consisting of geometric motifs was painted with ferrous clay on both sides of the bowl, over a layer of dry, very smoothed glaze. After firing, the painted decoration ranged in color from red to dark brown, while the background is shiny and cream-colored. The geometric motifs on the interior consist of groups of horizontal continuous and dotted lines, alternating with double lines, on which are placed small, elongated ovals. On the outer side, the decoration is a striped composition consisting of groups of several parallel diagonal lines inclined alternately to the left and to the right, and alternating triangular fields where the diagonal lines meet. Ca. 6500–ca. 5500 BC; Halaf culture, Northern Mesopotamia Iraq, Syria, Turkey. Pottery fragment; height 4.6 cm, width 5.6 cm, depth 4.4 cm, weight 12 g., A fragment of a flat, irregularly shaped object with a worn surface sits against a light gray background; the fragment is primarily beige with areas of darker brown and black, and it bears a pattern of several parallel dark brown lines radiating toward a central triangular beige area, with darker smudges and spots near the edges and a slightly darker, rougher lower rim.
Crédit
Photo12/Liszt Collection
Notre référence
LZT26A00_367
Licence
Droits gérés
Format disponible
17.2Mo (966.0Ko) / 25.5cm x 16.9cm / 3008 x 2000 (300dpi)