Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-qs9v7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-10T10:15:41.991Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Reconstructing the Materials and Technology of Egyptian Faience and Frit

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2011

Patricia S. Griffin*
Affiliation:
Cleveland Museum of Art, 11150 East Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44106
Get access

Abstract

This paper presents a research project undertaken at the Cleveland Museum of Art to study and characterize its collection of more than one hundred and fifty Egyptian artifacts made from faience or frit. An overview of the project is presented here, followed by a summary of faience technology that draws upon other published studies as well as the insights gained during this project. Where appropriate, this technological discussion will be illustrated using examples of Egyptian artifacts studied during this project. For some objects discussion will be limited to one or two aspects of manufacture. However, the proposed manufacturing sequence of several key artifacts will be described more fully.

A multi-faceted approach to the study of these materials was designed. Examination procedures used to study the collection included microscopy (surface examination using a lowpowered microscope, and microstructural characterization of exposed fracture surfaces or small samples using a scanning electron microscope), structural analysis using Xero-radiography, and nondestructive qualitative compositional analysis of glazes and pastes using x-ray fluorescence spectroscopy. Hardness testing using fine metal points graded to the Moh's scale, Munsell color evaluations and qualitative gloss determinations were also employed. Replication experiments were used extensively to understand visual features remaining on the surfaces of objects, to provide comparison standards for examination of fracture surfaces with magnification, and to test the validity of theories on paste recipes and forming practices.

The primary goal of the project was to provide accurate descriptions of the materials and technology of each object as possible. This included characterization of technological features such as glaze (probable application method, composition, color, and gloss), paste (grain size, color, hardness, composition, and extent of vitrification) and forming methods (modeling, molding, template, cores, wet working and/or dry working). Careful documentation of these features enabled detailed technological descriptions to be prepared for each artifact. This work also elucidated many aspects of faience production as it may have been practiced in ancient Egypt, and suggested directions for further study. It is hoped that in the future, technological criteria for dating artifacts that cannot be securely dated using traditional typological art historical criteria can be developed by the careful documentation of characteristics of the paste, glaze and forming processes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2002

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1. Berman, L.M. Bohac, with K.; Conservation Sections by Griffin, P.S. Christman, with B. 1999 Catalogue of Egyptian Art. Cleveland: The Cleveland Museum of Art. Google Scholar
2. Binns, C.F., Klem, M. and Mott, H. 1932 An experiment in Egyptian blue glaze. Journal of the American Ceramic Society: 15, 271–72.Google Scholar
3. , Brill, Robert, H, A chemical-analytical round-robin on four synthetic ancient glasses. Int. 9th Congress on Glass, 1971, 93110.Google Scholar
4. Chase, W.T. 1971 Egyptian Blue as a Pigment and Ceramic Material. In Science and Archaeology (ed. Brill, R.H.), 8090, Cambridge, MA: Leiden and MIT Press.Google Scholar
5. , Friedman, Florence, D (ed.). 1998 Gifts of the Nile. Providence: Rhode Island School of Design.Google Scholar
6. Gourdin, W.H. and Kingery, W.D. 1975 The Beginnings of Pyrotechnology: Neolithic and Egyptian Lime Plaster. Journal of Field Archaeology: 2, 133150.Google Scholar
7. Griffin, P.S., Grissom, C. and Rollefson, G. Three Late 8th Millenium Plaster Faces from 'Ain Ghazal, Jordan, Paleorient: 24/1, 1998, 5970.Google Scholar
8. Griffin, P., Faience: A Lost Art, The Cleveland Museum of Art Members Magazine, May 1998, pp. 89.Google Scholar
9. Griffin, P.S., , Faience and , Frits: Understanding Materials and Techniques in Ancient Egypt, The Cleveland Museum of Art Website, www.clevelandart.org/ConsExhib/html/index.html.Google Scholar
10. Griffin, P.S. and Leveque, M. Technical Section. In the exhibition Gifts of the Nile: Ancient Egyptian Faience. Cleveland Museum of Art, May 10- July 5, 1998; the Museum of Art- Rhode Island School of Design, August 26, 1998- Jan. 3, 1999.Google Scholar
11. Kaczmarczyk, A and Hedges, R.E.M. 1983 Ancient Egyptian Faience: An Analyitical Survey of Egyptian Faience from Predynastic to Roman Times. Warminster: Aris & Phillips, Ltd. Google Scholar
12. , Kiefer, , Charles and Allibert, A. 1971 Pharaonic blue ceramics: the process of self-glazing. Archaeology: 24/2, 107117.Google Scholar
13. Kozloff, A 1997 The Armana-Malqata Blues. Chief of seers: Egyptian studies in memory of Cyril Aldred (ed Goring, Elizabeth, Reeves, Nicholas, and Ruffle, John), New York: Kegan Paul International and National Museums of Scotland, 178–92.Google Scholar
14. Leveque, M 1998 Glossary. In Gifts of the Nile (ed. Friedman, Florence D.), 266267, Providence: Rhode Island School of Design.Google Scholar
15. Lilyquist, C. and Brill, R.H. 1993 Studies in Early Egyptian Glass. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.Google Scholar
16. Lucas, A and Harris, J. R. 1989 (reprint 4th ed., 1962) Ancient Egyptian Materials and Industries. London: Histories and Mysteries of Man Ltd.Google Scholar
17. Nicholson, P.T. with Peltenburg, E.J. 2000 Egyptian Faience. In Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology (eds. Nicholson, P.T. and Shaw, I.), 177194, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
18. , Nicholson, Paul, T. 1998 Materials and Technology, in Gifts of the Nile (ed.Friedman, Florence D.), 5065, Providence: Rhode Island School of Design.Google Scholar
19. , Noble, Veach, Joseph 1969 The technique of Egyptian faience. American journal of archaeology: 73/4, 435439.Google Scholar
20. Riederer, J. 1997 Egyptian Blue, in Artist'sPigments- A Handbook of their History and Characteristics, v. 3, (ed. Fitzhugh, E. West), 1997, Washington D.C.: National Gallery of Art. Google Scholar
21. Tite, M.S. 1987 Characterisation of Early Vitreous Materials. Archaeometry: 29/1, 2134.Google Scholar
22. Tite, M.S. and Bimson, M.. 1986 Faience: An Investigation of the Microstructures Associated with the Different Methods of Glazing. Archaeometry: 28/1, 6978.Google Scholar
23. Tite, M.S., Shortland, A. Nicholson, P.T. and Jackson, C.M. 1998 The use of copper and cobalt colorants in vitreous materials in ancient Egypt. In La Couleur dans la Peinture et l'Émaillage de l'Égypte Ancienne (ed. Colinart, S. and Menu, M.), 111120. Bari: Edipuglia.Google Scholar
24. , Vandiver, Pamela, B. 1998 New Criteria for Production Technologies of Egyptian Faience. In La Couleur dans la Peinture et l'Émaillage de l'Égypte Ancienne (ed. Colinart, S. and Menu, M.), 121142. Bari: Edipuglia.Google Scholar
25. , Vandiver, Pamela, B. 1983 Appendix A: Egyptian Faience Technology. In Ancient Egyptian Faience: An Analyitical Survey of Egyptian Faience from Predynastic to Roman Time, (Kaczmarczyk, A. and Hedges, R.E.M.), A1-A144. Warminster, UK.: Aris & Phillips Ltd. Google Scholar
26. Vandiver, P. Ellingson, WA, Robinson, TK, Lobick, JJ and Seguin, F.H., New applications of X-radiogoraghic ImagingTechnologies for archaeological Ceramincs, Archaeolmaterials 5:3, 1991, 185207.Google Scholar
27. Verges, F.B. 1992 Bleus Egyptiennes. Louvain-Paris.Google Scholar
28. , Wulff, Hildegard, Hans E. Wulff, S. and Koch, Leo 1968 Egyptian Faience: A Possible Survival in Iran, Archaeology: 21/ 2, 98107.Wulff, Hans E. Hildegard S. Wulff and Leo Koch. 1968 Egyptian Faience: A Possible Survival in Iran, Archaeology: 21/ 2, 98–107.Google Scholar