Archaeology in the home: neoclassical ceramics for new audiences in mid-nineteenth-century Britain

IF 0.2 4区 历史学 0 CLASSICS
P. Lewis
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Abstract

For audiences not familiar with antiquity, the shattering of the Portland Vase at the British Museum in 1845 raised awareness of a classical past which was claimed by many European nations as their cultural heritage. This article explores how the British ceramics industry quickly exploited a ready market, prompted by such interest. A new genre of wares was produced industrially, mainly in Stoke-on-Trent until the 1870s, although manufacture continued sporadically until 1900. Modern techniques, including moulding and transfer-printing, allowed the creation of versions of black- and red-figure ancient Greek ceramics, sometimes in vivid polychrome. Hitherto largely overlooked by museums and standard histories of ceramics, the material evidence of this fashion endures. Although the resulting artefacts were often marketed without reference to their origins in antiquity, an argument is presented here for their having more than merely decorative significance.
家中的考古学:19世纪中期英国新古典陶瓷的新观众
对于不熟悉古代的观众来说,1845年大英博物馆波特兰花瓶的破碎提高了人们对古典历史的认识,许多欧洲国家都声称这是他们的文化遗产。本文探讨了在这种兴趣的推动下,英国陶瓷业如何迅速开拓现成的市场。直到19世纪70年代,工业上主要在特伦特河畔的斯托克生产了一种新型的陶器,尽管直到1900年,制造业仍在零星地进行。包括模塑和转印在内的现代技术,使人们能够制作出不同版本的黑色和红色古希腊陶瓷,有时是生动的彩色陶瓷。迄今为止,这种时尚的物质证据在很大程度上被博物馆和标准的陶瓷历史所忽视。尽管由此产生的人工制品通常在没有提及其古代起源的情况下销售,但这里提出的论点是,它们不仅仅具有装饰意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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