Ceramics of Chios 17th–19th century

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A01=Nikos Liaros
Angelos Vlastaris
Author_Nikos Liaros
Category=AFP
Chian pithoi
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John S. Fafalios Foundation
modern Greek ceramics
pottery-making

Product details

  • ISBN 9786185209834
  • Weight: 1220g
  • Dimensions: 243 x 252mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2022
  • Publisher: Kapon Editions
  • Publication City/Country: GR
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The core of this volume is the collection of Chian pithoi and pithos lids belonging to Angelos Vlastaris. The book also contains important ceramics from other collections, as well as a wealth of archive material. Its scope is not limited to the study of the pottery alone; it also aims to present a tangible picture of the great cultural and social flowering of Chios before the Massacre of 1822.

The ceramics presented here were crafted in recent centuries but touch upon a medieval past. Their crude construction, their shape and their decoration are all features of Byzantine pithoi, attesting to an unbroken ceramic tradition. Their technical and morphological features indicate a standardised technological chaîne opératoire and a specific way of learning the craft. What is striking is the plethora of inscriptions, dates, Christian symbols and decorative motifs found on them. These ceramics express the general outward-looking spirit, the cultural and religious freedom of the period.

Proceeds from the sale of the book will be donated to a non-profit institution for the study and promotion of modern Greek ceramics.

Published jointly by the John S. Fafalios Foundation and Kapon Editions.

Substantially illustrated in colour and black & white. The text is presented in both Greek and English.

Nikos Liaros is an archaeologist and ceramicist. Born in Athens in 1974, he studied Archaeology and Art History at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, followed by a postgraduate degree at the University of Crete. Since 2004, he has worked for the Greek Archaeological Service, carrying out excavations and curating museum exhibitions. He learned pottery-making from the traditional potters of Koroni and Crete, and since 2008 he has been Curator at the Centre for the Study of Modern Ceramics in Athens.

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