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Of voids and skulls

Of voids and skulls

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  • Amanda Phillips
  • Independently Published
  • Paperback
  • 9780217887304
  • 9.69 X 7.44 X 0.1 inches
  • 0.22 pounds
  • Poetry > LGBTQ+
  • English
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: It is of course possible that the potters had learned to adjust the qualities of the glaze by small additions of alkali and iron oxide. Slight variations in the quantity of either of these substances greatly influence the physical properties of the glaze. This table cannot give more than a rough approximation of the quantities of the two ingredients of the mixture, as the losses of volatile matter in both limestone and clay during burning cannot be computed with accuracy. The table suggests that not far from one part of limestone to two parts of clay were employed. We may safely conclude that this glaze was made by adding pulverized limestone, lime, or milk of lime to the material from which the body of the pottery was made. The modern Chinese glaze for porcelain is made by mixing lime with one of the two ingredients of which they make the body. This process seems to be peculiar to China. Conclusions. -- At the time this ware was made, the potters had already acquired a high degree of dexterity. Many of the things that they accomplished in the fabrication of this pottery required technical skill of no mean order. The engobe coat, without which no satisfactory glaze could be made upon so porous a ware, was used. The expansion of the glaze has been very accurately adjusted to that of the body. The glaze is remarkably brilliant for one free from lead. The glaze has no large bubbles, nor are small bubbles numerous enough to cloud the ware. On the other hand, they made the glaze too thick, and they could not prevent it from running during the firing. With potters as skilful as these, the discovery of methods of overcoming the porosity of the ware, and thus making it a true porcelain, should be only a matter of time. As the engobe coat is porcelain, it is quite possible th...
Of voids and skulls

Author Bio

I am Associate Professor of Islamic Art and Material Culture, having joined the Department of Art in 2015 as Assistant Professor after positions at the University of Birmingham and the Museum of Islamic Art in Berlin. My first book, Everyday Luxuries, was published with the National Museums of Germany in 2016; it explored the circulation of art and objects in the Ottoman capital of Istanbul in the years between 1600 and 1800. The book argued, among other things, that the consumption habits of men and women in Istanbul drove the production of textiles, ceramics, metalware, woodwork, and other crafts, as well as the arts of the book. While these categories of objects form the bulk of many museum collections, they are often neglected by both scholars and curators. Everyday Luxuries proposed new ways of seeing, studying, and exhibiting them, also moving Islamic art history beyond its traditional focus on the uppermost elites.

My second monograph, Sea Change, published in 2021 with the University of California Press, explored Ottoman textiles from both a global and interdisciplinary perspective, uniting the eastern Mediterranean with the Indian Ocean on one hand, and social and economic history with art history, technical studies, and global history on the other. It also insists on a more comprehensive history of textiles, arguing that the plain, the non-canonical, the well-worn, and the downright mediocre are necessary parts of an expanded topography, and deserve treatment on their own terms. Artisans made decisions as the worked, and the book also returns agency to the men and women earning their livings in the textile sector. It shows how they coped with economic hardship and technological change, as well as how they resisted regulations imposed by the central authorities.

As an active researcher whose scholarship relies on close analysis of objects, I continue to work in museums across the US, Europe, and the Middle East, with occasional visits to South and East Asia. Using collections in Greece, Turkey, the UK, and the US, my third project will focus on the global language of flowers in the golden age of botany, as seen in textiles and other crafts. It will draw a through-line from the high arts and literature of the Ottoman court to vernacular modes of decoration, with a focus on textiles made and used by women.  

My research has been supported by the Fulbright Commission, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Max Planck and Marie Curie Foundations, the Gerda Henkel Stiftung, the British Academy, the Barakat Trust for Islamic Art, the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum in Lisbon, the Pasold Foundation for Textile Research, the Clarendon Bursary at the University of Oxford, and the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art in Honolulu, among other sponsors.

At UVa, I am Affiliated Faculty at the Department of Middle Eastern and South Asian Languages and Cultures and the director of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at the Department of Art, and am currently teaching in the College Fellows Program, part of the Engagements curriculum for first year undergraduates. I continue to offer a comprehensive history of the art and architecture of the Islamic world in the spring of each year and occasionally advise Distinguished Major’s Papers. Students interested in graduate study of the material culture of the Islamic world, and the Ottoman Empire especially, are invited to email me to discuss admission to the doctoral program in Art and Architectural History.

 

Source: University of Virginia Arts & Sciences 

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