Detail View: The AMICA Library: Storage jar decorated with mountain goats

AMICA ID: 
MMA_.59.52
AMICA Library Year: 
2000
Object Type: 
Decorative Arts and Utilitarian Objects
Creator Nationality: 
Asian; Middle Eastern; Persian
Creator Dates/Places: 
Central Iran
Creator Name-CRT: 
Central Iran
Title: 
Storage jar decorated with mountain goats
View: 
Full View
Creation Date: 
early 4th millennium B.C.
Creation Start Date: 
0
Creation End Date: 
0
Materials and Techniques: 
Ceramic, paint
Classification Term: 
Vessels
Creation Place: 
central Iran
Dimensions: 
H. 20.9 in. (53 cm)
AMICA Contributor: 
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Owner Location: 
New York, New York, USA
ID Number: 
59.52
Credit Line: 
Purchase, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest, 1959
Rights: 
Context: 

Traditions of making painted pottery flourished in agricultural villages throughout the Near East by the late Neolithic period of the seventh millennium B.C. These early ceramics were made by hand in a variety of techniques, including coil, mold, and slab construction, and served as cooking, serving, and storage vessels.

This large storage jar is a masterpiece of early pottery making. Produced in the early fourth millennium B.C. on the Iranian plateau, in a style known from excavations at the site of Tepe Sialk, it is a large buff-colored jar painted with dark brown designs. The geometric decoration on the upper portion of the vessel divides it into three panels. In each of these panels is the stylized image of an ibex shown in right profile to highlight the great arch of its exaggerated horns. The ibex was the most common motif in prehistoric ceramics of highland Iran, perhaps because of its symbolic significance as prey to hunters.

Related Image Identifier Link: 
MMA_.an59.52.R.tif