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  2. Bowl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowl

    Modern bowls can be made of ceramic, metal, wood, plastic, and other materials. Bowls have been made for thousands of years. Very early bowls have been found in China, Ancient Greece, Crete and in certain Native American cultures. In Ancient Greek pottery, small bowls, including phiales and pateras, and bowl-shaped cups called kylices were used

  3. Ceramic art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramic_art

    Ceramic bowl decorated with slip beneath a transparent glaze, Gorgan, 9th century CE, Early Islamic period, National Museum of Iran. Stoneware was also an important craft in Islamic pottery, produced throughout Iraq and Syria by the 9th century. [45] Pottery was produced in Raqqa, Syria, in the 8th century. [46]

  4. Chinese ceramics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_ceramics

    These markets inspired creativity and innovation as seen in how "Jingdezhen and other pottery centres produced ceramic versions of reliquaries, alms bowls, oil lamps, and stem-cups" [99] The difference in code did not necessarily contribute to a hierarchical division but rather a diversification in the personality behind Chinese porcelain.

  5. Jizhou ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jizhou_ware

    Jizhou ware was known for a "tortoiseshell glaze" (玳瑁釉 dàimàoyòu), [5] [6] alone or in combination with other types of decoration. [7]The leaf and paper cut-outs were left in place, and burnt away in the kiln during firing.

  6. Oribe ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oribe_ware

    Oribe ware (also known as 織部焼 Oribe-yaki) is a style of Japanese pottery that first appeared in the sixteenth century. It is a type of Japanese stoneware recognized by its freely-applied glaze as well as its dramatic visual departure from the more somber, monochrome shapes and vessels common in Raku ware of the time. [ 1 ]

  7. Tenmoku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenmoku

    White tenmoku Ofuke ware bowl, medium stoneware with rice-straw ash glaze, between 1700–1850 Edo period. Tenmoku (天目, also spelled "temmoku" and "temoku") is a type of glaze that originates in imitating Chinese Jian ware (建盏) of the southern Song dynasty (1127–1279), [1] original examples of which are also called tenmoku in Japan.

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