Skip to product information
1 of 1

Scientific Research on Ancient Asian Metallurgy

Regular price £65.00
Sale price £65.00 Regular price £65.00
Sale Sold out
The use of scientific methods to study works of art began at the Freer Gallery of Art in 1951 with the work of R. J. Gettens. While Mr. Gettens was active in many fields of research, his landmark p...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 01 May 2012
View Product Details

The use of scientific methods to study works of art began at the Freer Gallery of Art in 1951 with the work of R. J. Gettens. While Mr. Gettens was active in many fields of research, his landmark publication was the volume of technical studies on the Freer Chinese bronzes, a collaborative effort by scientists, conservators, and art historians. These proceedings, and their companion symposium, commemorate that work and also present recent studies on ancient Chinese bronzes and Southeast and West Asian copper alloys.

This work is the fifth in a series of publications of Forbes symposia proceedings by Archetype Publications in association with the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £65.00
Pages: 276
Publisher: Archetype Publications
Imprint: Archetype Publications
Publication Date: 01 May 2012
Trim Size: 11.90 X 8.45 in
ISBN: 9781904982722
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ART / Asian / General, History of art, Asian history

REVIEWS Icon

Foreword

Acknowledgments

List of contributors

Introduction

Reflections on R.J. Gettens and the technical studies of Chinese bronzes

A chemist under a spell: Rutherford John Gettens�s early encounters with Chinese bronzes

Francesca G. Bewer

The making of volume 2 of the Freer Chinese bronze book

W.T. Chase

Theories and observations: still looking at the Freer bronzes

Robert Bagley

Chinese bronzes

Recent research on early bronze metallurgy in northwest China

Mei Jianjun, Xu Jianwei, Chen Kunlong, Shen Lu and Wang Hui

Recent discoveries concerning metallurgy in Bronze Age Yunnan

Jin Zhengyao, Li Gong, Wang Haigang, Tian Jianhua, Yan Lifeng and Jiang Zhilong

Some decorative techniques and corrosion on Chinese bronze mirrors in the Cotsen collection

David A. Scott

Technical studies of three gui vessels of the early Western Zhou period in the British Museum collection

Wang Quanyu

An enlightened journey: transitions in casting of Chinese Buddhist images

Donna Strahan

Southeast Asian bronzes

Looking east: the coming of tin bronze in the context of Bronze Age trans-Eurasian exchange�an overview

Vincent C. Pigott

The high-tin bronzes of Thailand

Ian Glover and Anna Bennett

A flux that binds? The Southeast Asian Lead Isotope Project

Thomas Oliver Pryce

Khmer bronze metallurgy during the Angkorian period (twelfth to thirteenth centuries): technical investigation of a new selected corpus of artifacts from the National Museum of Cambodia, Phnom Penh

Brice Vincent, David Bourgarit and Paul Jett

Casting of ancient drums in North Vietnam

Trinh Sinh

West Asian copper alloys

Ten millennia of metallurgy in Western Asia

Paul T. Craddock

Copper-zinc alloys at Nuzi: dilemmas from an early excavation

Katherine Eremin, Susanna Kirk, Andrew Shortland and Megan Richters

Reconstructing ancient technologies: Chalcolithic crucible smelting at Tal-i Iblis, Iran

Lesley D. Frame

Metallurgy during the Middle Chalcolithic period in the Southern Caucasus: insight through recent discoveries at Mentesh-Tepe, Azerbaijan

Antoine Courcier, Bertille Lyonnet and Farhad Guliyev

The casting techniques of antique South Arabian large bronze statues

Beno�t Mille

Medieval Islamic copper alloys

Susan La Niece, Rachel Ward, Duncan Hook and Paul Craddock