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LOT 0051

Lot of 3 Anatolian Yortan Blackware Pouring Vessels

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Ancient Asia Minor, Western Anatolia, Yortan culture, Early Bronze Age II, ca. 2700 to 2400 BCE. A fine gathering of three wheel-thrown blackware pottery vessels with highly burnished surfaces and incised decorations. Each vessel has a round but stable base, a spherical body with a sloped shoulder, and a thick handle, with the smaller vessel bearing a rounded spout with a slanted lip, and the two larger vessels with projecting cylindrical spouts with rounded lips. The exterior of each body displays registers of lightly incised zigzagging motifs that stretch from just above the base to just below the spout. Size of largest: 9.4" W x 12.75" H (23.9 cm x 32.4 cm); 14.75" H (37.5 cm) on included custom stand.

Ancient Western Anatolia is famous for a number of large ruins, most notably Troy (Hisarlik), but many mysteries remain. The Yortan culture is known through a burial site in the valley of Bakir Cai that has not been well-studied. Adults and children are buried, crouched, in large terracotta storage containers; around them were placed a great deal of pottery in the form of jugs, jars, and occasionally bowls, much of it blackware just like these examples.

For a stylistically similar example of the smaller vessel, please see The Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 62.114.2; for an example similar to the larger vessels, see accession number 62.153.

Provenance: private Virginia, USA collection

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#150320
Condition Report: Medium-sized vessel has repairs to spout and handle, with stabilization to one fissure along lower body, and chipping and light adhesive residue along break lines; smallest and largest vessels are intact and very good. All three vessels have abrasions and nicks to spouts, handles, bodies, and bases, with light softening to incised motifs, fading to areas of original black coloration, and encrustations. Great earthen deposits and traces of original black color throughout.

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05 Dec 2019
USA, Louisville, KY
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[ translate ]

Ancient Asia Minor, Western Anatolia, Yortan culture, Early Bronze Age II, ca. 2700 to 2400 BCE. A fine gathering of three wheel-thrown blackware pottery vessels with highly burnished surfaces and incised decorations. Each vessel has a round but stable base, a spherical body with a sloped shoulder, and a thick handle, with the smaller vessel bearing a rounded spout with a slanted lip, and the two larger vessels with projecting cylindrical spouts with rounded lips. The exterior of each body displays registers of lightly incised zigzagging motifs that stretch from just above the base to just below the spout. Size of largest: 9.4" W x 12.75" H (23.9 cm x 32.4 cm); 14.75" H (37.5 cm) on included custom stand.

Ancient Western Anatolia is famous for a number of large ruins, most notably Troy (Hisarlik), but many mysteries remain. The Yortan culture is known through a burial site in the valley of Bakir Cai that has not been well-studied. Adults and children are buried, crouched, in large terracotta storage containers; around them were placed a great deal of pottery in the form of jugs, jars, and occasionally bowls, much of it blackware just like these examples.

For a stylistically similar example of the smaller vessel, please see The Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession number 62.114.2; for an example similar to the larger vessels, see accession number 62.153.

Provenance: private Virginia, USA collection

All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.

A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.

We ship worldwide to most countries and handle all shipping in-house for your convenience.

#150320
Condition Report: Medium-sized vessel has repairs to spout and handle, with stabilization to one fissure along lower body, and chipping and light adhesive residue along break lines; smallest and largest vessels are intact and very good. All three vessels have abrasions and nicks to spouts, handles, bodies, and bases, with light softening to incised motifs, fading to areas of original black coloration, and encrustations. Great earthen deposits and traces of original black color throughout.

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Time, Location
05 Dec 2019
USA, Louisville, KY
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