Pitcher Imitating Cypriot and Western Asiatic Jug
Description
Object Label: Pottery Manufacture Available materials, construction technique, and even social status all played a role in the manufacture of pottery. Most ancient Egyptian towns had at least one skilled potter who served the entire community. Palaces, estates, and temples employed dozens of craftsmen to fashion luxury and ritual wares. Potters used two principal materials: alluvial silt (soil deposited by the floodwaters of the Nile) and soft desert shale called marl. Silt contains iron oxides and fires red; marl, rich in calcium carbonate, fires to a buff color. To make both clays more workable, potters added straw, crushed stone, or pulverized pottery. Potters constructed vessels by hand or on a wheel. Hand building involved shaping the clay manually and with simple tools. To create vessels on a wheel, artisans rotated the clay rapidly on a low, flat turntable and let centrifugal force pull it into shape. Spiral marks, evident on several examples in this case, indicate wheel manufacture. Caption: Pitcher Imitating Cypriot and Western Asiatic Jug, ca. 1479–1400 B.C.E.. Clay, pigment, 6 x Diam. 4 5/16 in. (15.3 x 10.9 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Charles Edwin Wilbour Fund, 07.447.475. (Photo: Brooklyn Museum)
AI image analysis GPT-4o-2024-08-06
Machine-generated from the object's image on May 2026. Not curatorial; treat deities, names, and signs below as the model's best reading, not authority.
An ancient Egyptian pottery vessel with a single handle and decorative lines.
The image depicts an ancient Egyptian pottery vessel characterized by a tall neck and a single handle. The vessel has a rounded body and features decorative lines that encircle it, adding to its aesthetic appeal. The style suggests it could be utilitarian or decorative in nature.
Connections
Cross-references (2)
- BKM-Accession 07.447.475 tier-2
- BKM-Object 4221 tier-2
About this record's data
- From the source institution — accession, description, dimensions, and dating are as catalogued by Brooklyn Museum — Egyptian, Classical, Ancient Near Eastern Art.
- AI-inferred — the image-analysis panel (deities, names, signs) is machine-generated and may be wrong.
- Approximate location — most map points are plotted at the site centroid, not the exact findspot.
- Inferred links — cross-references marked with a match method other than explicit-source-field were matched by us, not stated by the source.