Art Pottery Gallery
calinda-fox
hazel-luna-grace
miss-rachelh
observador35
anti-shipper
vicentegarciaartPlease credit me if you use these!
vicentegarciaartPlease credit me if you use these!
vicentegarciaartPlease credit me if you use these!
Ostrakon with a Letter from John, Medieval ArtMedium: Pottery fragment with ink inscriptionRogers Fu
treasures-and-beauty:by Freiwald Art Pottery
awesome-picz:This Artist Makes Incredibly Tiny Pottery By Hand
alexandriad:woman yelling at cat meme but make it ancient greek red figure pottery
fishstickmonkey:Gnathian PyxisSouth Italian, Sicilian, late 4th century B.C. Place made: Sicily, Sou
Footed goblet decorated in cobalt and lustre, Iran, late 17th century.“The decoration on this
ace-artemis-fanartist:“We are not broken things, neither of us. We are cracked pottery mended with l
Cappadocia, Turkey
ladycrappo: “Kintsugi or kintsukuroi is a is the Japanese art of fixing broken pottery with lacquer
Terracotta kline (couch) with nuptial banquet and Erotes Greek, Hellenistic Period, c. 3rd to 2nd ce
Roman Corbridge Town, Newcastle Upon Tyne, 2.8.18.Various sites and locations of the Roman ruins inc
Mayan codex-style vessel, showing the deity Pauahtun instructing two scribes. Artist unknown (Mexic
artifakts:An exhibition that looks at death and funerary practices through thirteen elaborate vases
William Merritt Chase (American; 1849–1916)Portrait of Dora WheelerOil on canvas, 1882–83 The Clevel
Pottery Whistle, Musical InstrumentsGift of John Meigs Keith, 1908Metropolitan Museum of Art, New Yo
Hopi ceramic canteen decorated with Pahlhikmana, the Water Maiden. Artist unknown; late 1800s. Now
Pottery of the Mangbetu people, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Now in the American Museum of Nat
Terracotta vessel of the Mangbetu people, Democratic Republic of the Congo. Artist unknown; early 2
Attic red-figure wareFirst piece in my Ancient Pottery Series :) See the rest here [x]☆Merch Here☆
akalle:Pottery cup decorated with Artemis; Corinth, c. 450-400 BCE, British Museum
Canopic urn. 6th c. B.C.; terracotta. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. “Long after inhumation became
Prev
Next