Rotroff, 'Artful Crafts: Ancient Greek Silverware and Pottery', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9508
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9508-rotroff-artful
@@@@95.8.8, Vickers/Gill, Artful Crafts
Michael Vickers and David Gill, Artful Crafts: Ancient Greek
Silverware and Pottery. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994. Pp. 255.
$65.00. ISBN 0-19-813226-3.
Reviewed by Susan I. Rotroff -- Hunter College
srotro@leon.nrcps.ariadne-t.gr
In 1982 Michael Vickers presented a radical new view of Greek
painted pottery to a group of scholars assembled at Rouen (Vickers 1983):
he argued that the Attic painted pots that enjoy such high status in the
contemporary scholarly and commercial world were nothing more than
slavish copies of originals in precious metals. An amplified and more
widely read version appeared in print a few years later, as "Artful
Crafts: The Influence of Metalwork on Athenian Painted Pottery," (Vickers
1985) and Vickers has since reiterated and defended his thesis
repeatedly. David Gill's work on the relationship between silverware and
Attic black glaze and the mechanics of the ancient pottery trade began to
appear a couple of years later. These two scholars now join forces to
produce an integrated summary of their work.
Chapter 1 sets the scene with a discussion of the origins of the
modern notion that painted pottery was a valuable commodity prized and
used by the elite, arguing that this inflated valuation is rooted in the
marketing of Greek painted pottery and the contemporary vessels it
inspired in the 18th century. In Chapter 2 the authors tackle the thorny
problem of modern equivalents for ancient prices, offering a complicated
formula that gives a sum in British pounds, based on the value of silver
corrected to its ancient relation to gold. This preserves consistency
throughout the book, but when a drachma (here and everywhere cited as the
daily wage for a skilled worker in the 5th century) translates as #1.80,
one realizes that the equivalents have little to do with modern earning
and buying power. V and G investigate the financial standing of the
Athenian elite and argue that precious vessels were a common sight on
their tables. They also discuss the use of gold- and silverware as
reserves of wealth, facilitated by the practice of making vessels in
multiples of standard units of weight. "The Fate of Plate" occupies
Chapter 3, a fascinating excursus on the looting, capture, and recasting
of precious objects as documented in the literary and epigraphical
sources. V and G's point--that surviving vessels represent a very tiny
percentage of the wealth of ancient Greece--emerges clearly.
The real heart of the controversy that has revolved around
Vickers' work in particular is to be found in Chapters 4-6. This begins
with an attack on the notion of "the worthy potter," a respected artist
who earned enough to make lavish dedications on the Acropolis, and argues
against the contention that figured pottery was a valuable commodity and
an economically significant item of trade. V and G can only be applauded
for combating a market-driven overvaluation of Greek painted pottery, but
they are unable to produce a clear picture of just how much that pottery
was "worth" to its contemporaries. What is lacking here is a model of
the social and economic structure of Athenian society as a whole. Are we
talking about two classes: the rich with their silver and gold, and
everyone else? If so, where was the dividing line? Was there a "middle
class"? Was there a gradual gradation from rich to poor? How steep was
the pyramid? Just how typical was that famous skilled workman who earned
one drachma a day? Without answers to these questions it is impossible
to assess the place of ceramics in ancient Athenian economy and society.
The work of V and G reminds us, though, that these unanswered questions
must remain behind every inquiry into Greek pottery and every use of
ceramics for the investigation of ancient Greek life. The model they put
forward is a beginning, although it is overly simplistic: gold and silver
for the rich, silver and bronze for the hoplite class; figured pottery
for the "urban proletariat" (is such a phrase meaningful in an ancient
setting?), wood for the very poor (is wood necessarily cheaper than clay
in a deforested environment?). The evidence of excavation. which V and G
rarely consult, demonstrates that ceramics were in fact present at all
levels of society; a more thoughtful exploration of that evidence might
have contributed to a more sophisticated model.
Chapter 5 presents the now famous vision of Greek pottery as a
direct reflection of work in precious materials. Black glaze replicates
silver, red-figure reflects gold-figures applied to a silver background,
black-figure imitates silver figures on a bronze or gold ground. Purple
translates as copper, white as ivory. The egraphsen and
epoiesen inscriptions traditionally regarded as signatures of
painter and potter are read as the names those who designed and made the
precious originals that the clay pots copy (Chapter 6). V and G do not
leave the Athenian potters' quarter in disarray, for they "are fully
prepared to concur with the bulk of Beazley's attributions" (161). But
they do remove the creative act from the world of the potter to that of
the metalsmith, a bitter pill for those who give the Berlin painter and
his colleagues the status of ancient Michelangelos. The authors extend
their model here in space and time--to China and the Islamic world, and
to the Hellenistic period. In the latter there is a tendency to play
fast and loose with chronology. The moldmade pottery that they describe
as replacing red-figure originated ca. 225, not 320 BC as they would have
it. What really replaced red-figure as table ware was West Slope, a
ceramic development from a 4th-century gold-decorated ware that adhered
closely to metal models. V and G relate the introduction of "immense
quantities of orangey-red tableware" in unspecified "wealthier centers
elsewhere in the Hellenistic world" (perhaps they are thinking of
Pergamon?) to a change from silver and silver gilt to solid gold
dedications in temple inventories "after the third quarter of the fourth
century" (178). But as they know, red gloss is a development of the 2nd
century, not the late 4th, so it is hard to see how the two phenomena can
be connected.
A final chapter announces a "new agenda for the study of Greek
pottery", V and G's suggestions are unexceptional but sensible, and often
surprisingly traditional. Most striking is the extension of the
"white=ivory" formula to terracotta figurines, which are often coated
with a white slip that is usually taken to be a base coat for additional
painting (which is often present). This will undoubtedly bring a
spirited response from students of the coroplastic art.
The works of Vickers and Gill have raised the hackles of many
prominent members of the vase-painting establishment, who have already
critiqued them with more learning and spirit than the present reviewer
can command (Boardman 1987, Cook 1987, Robertson 1987). Few readers, I
think, will be willing to swallow their thesis whole. My own feeling is
that, ingenious as their model is, they push it too far; in their words,
"...once one has been alerted to the possibilities of metallic
inspiration, there is no point at which it is reasonable to stop" (133).
That some clay vessels copy metal slavishly is undeniable, and we can be
grateful to V and G for illustrating this so clearly. That does not
mean, however, that a copper rivet lurks behind every purple dot or a
gold treasure behind all oxidized glaze. Careful examination of pottery
of any period will reveal ceramic shapes and styles that are difficult to
read as skeuomorphs of metal or ivory; V and G cite Geometric pottery as
an example, and it would not be hard to find others. Input from other
materials comes in fits and starts. The potter begins by making more or
less precise imitations but may then go off on an increasingly ceramic
tangent, along which his successors continue, only to look back to metal
models a generation or two later. At some points V and G seem to suggest
this (e.g., in their discussion of "metallurgical shock" [109]), but
elsewhere not, and in their zest to demonstrate the dependent
relationship of potters to metalworkers they sometimes lose sight of the
fluid dynamics of that relationship.
This is not to say, however, that their work does not contain
important insights. Their project brings us closer to a clear-headed
understanding of the roles painted pots really played in the ancient
world, and has made substantial progress towards reconstructing the role
of precious metals in ancient Athens. It is also a creative attempt to
answer some of the most baffling questions posed by Greek painted
ceramics:. Why did Athenian artisans expend so much time and care on
objects of minimal intrinsic worth? Who used this pottery? What do
egraphsen and epoiesen really mean? These issues, which
ought to be at center stage, are too often glossed over in discussions of
painted pottery. Vickers and Gill perform an important service in their
insistence that we give them due consideration.
To many Classical archaeologists, Artful Crafts, the book,
will be tediously familiar. Most of the testimonia, anecdotes,
arguments, and even the phraseology have appeared before, and one may
tire of these repeated recitations. For students and those outside the
field, however, this volume makes these controversial ideas easily
accessible, and for scholars it eliminates the necessity of referring to
them as fragmented in the periodical literature. Along with the standard
handbooks, Artful Crafts should be required reading for all
students of Classical Archaeology; taken together, the two approaches
illustrate just how slight a foundation supports our certainties about
the past.
REFERENCES
Boardman, J. 1987. "Silver is White," RA, 279-295.
Cook, R. M. 1987. "'Artful Crafts': A Commentary," JHS 107,
1987, 169-171.
Robertson, M. 1985. "Beazley and Attic Vase Painting," in Beazley
and Oxford, D. C. Kurtz, ed., Oxford, 19-30.
Vickers, M. 1983. " Les vases peintes: image ou mirage?," in Image
et ceramique grecque: Actes du colloque de Rouen 25-26 novembre 1982,
F. Lissarrague and F. Thelamon, eds., Rouen, 29-42.
- - - 1985. "Artful Crafts: The Influence of Metalwork on Athenian
Painted Pottery," JHS 105, 108-128.