TY - JOUR
T1 - Ceramics with metallic lustre decoration. A detailed knowledge of Islamic productions from 9th century until Renaissance
AU - Chabanne, Delhia
AU - Aucouturier, Marc
AU - Bouquillon, Anne
AU - Darque-Ceretti, Evelyne
AU - Makariou, Sophie
AU - Dectot, Xavier
AU - Faÿ-Hallé, Antoinette
AU - Miroudot, Delphine
PY - 2011/1/1
Y1 - 2011/1/1
N2 - This paper describes research on the technological evolution of glazed
ceramics with a metallic lustre decoration starting from their emergence
in the Near East until the Hispano-Moresque productions. That research
covers the main known Islamic production sites and periods: Abbasid
(Mesopotamia); Fatimid (Egypt); Timurid, Mongol, and Safavid (Iran);
Ayyubid and Mamluk (Syria); Nasrid and Hispano-Moresque (Spain). It was
allowed by the access to more than hundred full preserved objects or
fragments supplied by French national museums (Mus\'ee du Louvre DAI,
Mus\'ee national du Moyen Age, Mus\'ee national de C\'eramique). The
characterisation of the composition and structure of the ceramics and of
their decoration is mostly done through non-destructive analyses
methods. The thickness and metal content of the surface lustre layers
are quantified thanks to ion beam analyses performed on a particle
accelerator: PIXE (particle-induced X-ray emission) for the terracotta
and glazes composition and RBS (Rutherford backscattering spectrometry)
for the thickness and metal content of the lustre surface layers. The
preliminary results show that the features of the decorated ceramics
have undergone dramatic variations when transmitted from a production to
another, not only, as expected, in the composition of terracotta and
glazes, but also in the thickness, the structure and the composition
distribution of the lustre layers.
AB - This paper describes research on the technological evolution of glazed
ceramics with a metallic lustre decoration starting from their emergence
in the Near East until the Hispano-Moresque productions. That research
covers the main known Islamic production sites and periods: Abbasid
(Mesopotamia); Fatimid (Egypt); Timurid, Mongol, and Safavid (Iran);
Ayyubid and Mamluk (Syria); Nasrid and Hispano-Moresque (Spain). It was
allowed by the access to more than hundred full preserved objects or
fragments supplied by French national museums (Mus\'ee du Louvre DAI,
Mus\'ee national du Moyen Age, Mus\'ee national de C\'eramique). The
characterisation of the composition and structure of the ceramics and of
their decoration is mostly done through non-destructive analyses
methods. The thickness and metal content of the surface lustre layers
are quantified thanks to ion beam analyses performed on a particle
accelerator: PIXE (particle-induced X-ray emission) for the terracotta
and glazes composition and RBS (Rutherford backscattering spectrometry)
for the thickness and metal content of the lustre surface layers. The
preliminary results show that the features of the decorated ceramics
have undergone dramatic variations when transmitted from a production to
another, not only, as expected, in the composition of terracotta and
glazes, but also in the thickness, the structure and the composition
distribution of the lustre layers.
KW - Condensed Matter - Materials Science
M3 - Article
SN - 0032-6895
JO - Matériaux et techniques
JF - Matériaux et techniques
ER -