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  2. Mississippian culture pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mississippian_culture_pottery

    Mississippian culture pottery was made from locally available clay sources, which often gives archaeologists clues as to where a specific example originated. The clay was tempered with an additive to keep it from shrinking and cracking in the drying and firing process, usually with ground mussel shells. In some locations the older tradition of ...

  3. Visual arts of the Indigenous peoples of the Americas

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visual_arts_of_the...

    The Adena culture are another well-known example of an early Woodland culture. They carved stone tablets with zoomorphic designs, created pottery, and fashioned costumes from animal hides and antlers for ceremonial rituals. Shellfish was a mainstay of their diet, and engraved shells have been found in their burial mounds.

  4. Ceramics of Indigenous peoples of the Americas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ceramics_of_indigenous...

    Ceramics of Indigenous peoples of the Americas is an art form with at least a 7500-year history in the Americas. [1] Pottery is fired ceramics with clay as a component. Ceramics are used for utilitarian cooking vessels, serving and storage vessels, pipes, funerary urns, censers, musical instruments, ceremonial items, masks, toys, sculptures ...

  5. Ancient Maya art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Maya_art

    Ancient Maya art comprises the visual arts of the Maya civilization, an eastern and south-eastern Mesoamerican culture made up of a great number of small kingdoms in present-day Mexico, Guatemala, Belize and Honduras. Many regional artistic traditions existed side by side, usually coinciding with the changing boundaries of Maya polities.

  6. Urn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urn

    Urn. An urn is a vase, often with a cover, with a typically narrowed neck above a rounded body and a footed pedestal. Describing a vessel as an "urn", as opposed to a vase or other terms, generally reflects its use rather than any particular shape or origin. The term is especially often used for funerary urns, vessels used in burials, either to ...

  7. Guilloché - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guilloché

    Guilloché. Guilloché (French: [ɡijɔʃe]), or guilloche (/ ɡɪˈloʊʃ /), is a decorative technique in which a very precise, intricate and repetitive pattern is mechanically engraved into an underlying material via engine turning, which uses a machine of the same name. Engine turning machines may include the rose engine lathe and also the ...

  8. Art of Mesopotamia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Art_of_Mesopotamia

    The preferred jewellery designs used in Mesopotamia were natural and geometric motifs such as leaves, cones, spirals, and bunches of grapes. Sumerian and Akkadian jewellery was created from gold and silver leaf and set with many semiprecious stones (mostly agate , carnelian , jasper , lapis lazuli and chalcedony ).

  9. Villanovan culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villanovan_culture

    A custom believed to originate with the Villanovan culture is the usage of hut-shaped urns, which were cinerary urns fashioned like the huts in which the villagers lived. Typical sgraffito decorations of swastikas, meanders, and squares were scratched with a comb-like tool. Urns were accompanied by simple bronze fibulae, razors and rings.

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