Drift in Mesopotamian pottery

Samarra pottery as a model

Authors

  • Mohammed Jassim Al-Obaidi Al-Mustansiriya University / College of Basic Education

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31973/aj.v1i137.1180

Keywords:

displacement, pottery, Mesopotamia, civilization

Abstract

Of the modern sciences that have worked in the arena of cultural, scientific, artistic and academic ideologies, which began to cover the arena around us with its characters, connotations, symbols and intersecting techniques at the beginning of the twentieth century, the "displacement theory", which carried in its engines the cultural references that began to pass through important stages in most contemporary arts, including plastic arts in general and ceramic arts in particular. Despite the existence of many alternatives, this "shift" theory began to control the internal structures of the pottery works, in a direction that specifically highlights the pottery and ceramic work, Especially the ancient Mesopotamian pottery works, this accumulated product and witness to the action of all the exciting achievements, which have become effective since ancient times until they are summoned to contemporary and in turn contribute to directing the steps in the right path, and it becomes one of the concerns of contemporary thought.

Which began in a system of prevailing systems in an artistic and experimental language to take a picture of integration in this field that establishes the foundations of that theory, which reached a great significance in the early twentieth century, and these steps are still vigorous and important with artistic productions that increase significantly to meet the requirements of art, Artistic production began to increase steadily - the fullest share of contemporary art was dedicated to satisfying the prevailing public taste and did not possess long-lasting properties.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Abu Deeb, Kamal (1987): in poetry, the Arab Research Foundation, Beirut – Lebanon.

Al-Hourani, Youssef (without history): The Mental Structure in the Ancient Asian Mediterranean East, Fourth Edition, Cairo.

Al-Jarasha, Ahmad Ghaleb (without history): The Drift Stylistics in the Qur’an Text, First Edition.

Al-Suleiman, Abdul-Aziz Muhammad (1995): Awakening Poetry, Al-Khaled Press, Second Edition, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

Arnoldhauser (1971): Art and Society Throughout History, translated by Fouad Zakaria, Egyptian Public Authority for Authorship and Publishing, Cairo.

Ayyat, Enas (1999): A Strategist for Receiving in the Light of Contemporary Intellectual Trends, Second Edition, Egypt – Cairo.

Badness, now (1990): Modern European Art, translated by Fakhri Khalil, reviewed by Jabra Ibrahim Jabra, Al Mamoun House for Translation and Publishing, Baghdad.

Crop, sublime (without history): displacement in stylistic studies, Journal of Ferri Insight for Studies and Research, Issue 5.

Dewey, John (1994): Art is an Expertise, translated by Zakaria Ibrahim, Franklin Foundation for Printing, Publishing and Distribution, Third Edition, Cairo.

Fisher, Ernst (1971): The Necessity of Art, translated by Asaad Selim, The Egyptian Public Authority for Authorship and Publishing, Cairo.

Goodman, Lucian (1996): The Humanities and Philosophy Translated, Dr. Youssef Al-Antaki, Supreme Council of Culture, the National Project for Translation.

Sahib, Zuhair (1996): Rounded Prehistoric Pottery Sculptures, Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Baghdad, College of Fine Arts.

Sahib, Zuhair (2010): Prehistoric Pottery of Mesopotamia, Archeology Series of the House of General Cultural Affairs, First Edition, Baghdad.

Sheikh Al-Ard, Tayseer (1991): Examination of the Basis of Arts, Arab Writers Union, Damascus.

Shukri, Ismail (1999): A Critique of the Concept of Displacement, Fikrun wa Naqd Magazine, Issue 23.

Strauss, Claude Levy (1995): Architectural Humanity, translated by Hasan Metbs, Arab Cultural Center, First Edition, Beirut – Lebanon.

Weiss, Muhammad (2005): displacement through stylistic studies, University Foundation for Studies.

Downloads

Published

2021-06-15

Issue

Section

Other studies

How to Cite

Al-Obaidi, M. J. (2021). Drift in Mesopotamian pottery: Samarra pottery as a model. Al-Adab Journal, 1(137), 669-690. https://doi.org/10.31973/aj.v1i137.1180

Publication Dates

Similar Articles

71-80 of 115

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.