Impasto (pottery)
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/14/Amphore_%C3%A0_d%C3%A9cor_incis%C3%A9_de_spirales_et_d%27oiseaux_%28Louvre_C551%29_01.jpg/220px-Amphore_%C3%A0_d%C3%A9cor_incis%C3%A9_de_spirales_et_d%27oiseaux_%28Louvre_C551%29_01.jpg)
An Etruscan impasto amphora, Louvre.
Impasto is a type of coarse Etruscan pottery. The defining characteristic is that the clay contains chips of mica or stone.[1]
In G.A. Mansuelli's, The Art of Etruria and Early Rome (1964), the term "impasto pottery" is described in the following way: "Ceramic technique characteristic of hand-worked vases. By 'impasto pottery' is generally meant that of pre-historic times, of the Iron Age or later, made of impure clay with silica content." (p. 236)
See also[]
![]() |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Impasto. |
References[]
- ^ Nigel Spivey, Etruscan Art, page 35
Categories:
- Archaeological artefact types
- Etruscan ceramics
- European archaeology stubs
- Etruria stubs