Slip painting
As Schlickermalerei a technique for painting is of ceramic products referred to in the brush a different-colored, viscous clay suspension ( slurry is applied) on a molded, leather hard, but not yet fired pottery. In earthenware this is a common decorative technique. If this slip is applied with a painting horn or similar device, it is called a painting horn decor.
Barbotine technique
In the archaeological context, the term barbotine technique is also used for slip painting. This term is particularly common in addressing Minoan ceramics of the Kamares style and in Attic vase painting of the 4th century BC. BC, where it is widespread in so-called black varnish ceramics . Vessels decorated with barbotines are known primarily from the Roman era . The technique has been applied to a wide variety of different types of goods. Barbotine decor can be found on Terra Sigillata , Belgian goods as well as on the so-called Wetterau goods . Black engobed cups with black (so-called " hunting cups ") or white plating, the so-called Trier saying cups, are still prominent .
See also
Individual evidence
- ^ C. Zervos: L'art de la Crete neolithique et minoenne. 1956, p. 234 ff.
- ↑ G. Köpcke: Study on Attic black varnish ceramics . (Diss.) Munich 1962.
literature
- Wolfgang Hackspiel: The manufacture of the Lower Rhine earthenware . In: Joachim Naumann (ed.): Ceramic from the Lower Rhine. Cologne 1988. pp. 255ff. ISBN 3-927396-00-1
- Ingeborg Scheibler : Barbotine technology . In: Lexicon of the Old World p. 436.
- Ingeborg Scheibler: Greek pottery art. Manufacture, trade and use of antique clay pots. Munich 1995. ISBN 978-3-406-39307-5