Kutahya ceramics in Istanbul | Exhibitions | Showcase
Turkey is famous across the globe for its delicate ceramics and colourful, ornate tiles, with different regions continuing to produce diverse and distinctive designs over the centuries. And now, with a collection from one of the country's most famous workshops now on display in Istanbul, Showcase's Kerry Alexandra went to learn how Kutahya ceramics have remained a firm favourite five hundred years on.
Subscribe:
Livestream:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Instagram:
Visit our website:
Çini Müzesi & Çinili Camii | Kütahya, Turkey (Ceramic museum & Tile mosque)
Çini Müzesi
Çinili Camii
KÜTAHYA ÇİNİ MÜZESİ - TİLE MUSEUM - KÜTAHYA / TURKEY.Gezi Videoları 2019.
► ►Son Germiyan Beyi 2. Yakup'un ( 1387-1429) yaptırdığı Külliyenin imaret bölümü olan yapı Ulucamii yanındadır.Uzun zaman Vahid Paşa Halk Kütüphanesi olarak kullanılmış,kütüphanenin buradan ayrılmasından sonra uzun zaman boş kalmış.Yapı restore edilerek 5 Mart 1999 tarihinde Çini Müzesi olarak ziyarete açılmıştır.
► ►► ►► ►► ►► ► ENGLİSH ► ►► ►► ►► ►► ►► ►
► ►The building is the soup kitchen of the complex built by Yakup II (1387-1429),The Last Ruler of Germiyan Principality and next to the Great Mosque,it is used as Vahid Pasha Public Library for a long time,and it is abondoned after the library moved.The building is restored and opened to public as Tile Museum on 5 March 1999.
► ►Kanalımızda seyredeceğiniz tüm videolar , seyahate çıkmadan önce sizlere rehber olabilmesi adına yayınlanmaktadır.Şimdiden iyi gezmeler.
► ►All the videos you will watch on our channel are published in order to be able to guide you before going on a trip.
► ►Video işinize yaradıysa desteğinizi göstermek adına beğenmeyi ve kanala abone olmayı unutmayın.
► ►If the video made you work, do not forget to subscribe to liking and subscribing to show your support.
► ► ►Diğer gezi videolarımız için takipte kalın.► ► ►
►Tarsus Şelalesi /Tarsus Waterfall-Roman Tombs/Roma Mezarları
►Ashab-ı Keyf &yedi uyuyanlar mağarası
►H.z Danyal Peygamber'in Kabri ve camii
►Keloğlan Mağarası /Keloğlan Cave
►St.John Kilisesi /The St.John Church
►Taşkuyu Mağarası/Taşkuyu Cave-Tarsus
►Magnesia Antik Kenti- söke / Aydın
►AdamKayalar & Şeytan Deresi- Mersin/ Erdemli
►Smyrna Agora Ancient city /izmir-turkey
►İzmir Sanat ve Arkeoloji Müzesi/ İzmir Art and Archeology Museum
►Metropolis Antik Kenti
►Şirince köyü
►İzmir sanat ve arkeoloji müzesi-bölüm 2-İzmir-TURKEY
►Salda Gölü/lake of salda Burdur/TURKEY
►Gökova Körfezi-Köyceğiz Gölü-Yuvarlak çay-Azmak Nehri
►Sardes Antik Kenti/Sardes Ancient City . Salihli-Manisa / Turkey
►Honaz & Kaklık Mağarası -Kaklık Cave Honaz-Denizli /TURKEY
►Yeni Uşak Müzesi ve Karun Hazineleri-Uşak Museum And Karun Treasures / Turkey
► Şerefiye Sarnıcı-şerefiye cistern /istanbul-TURKEY
► Kız Kulesi-Maiden's Tower-İSTANBUL-TURKEY
► Burdur Gölü -Lake Burdur-Burdur-TURKEY
► Eğirdir Gölü-Lake Eğirdir-Isparta-TURKEY
► Ulubey Kanyonları-Ulubey Canyons-Ulubey-UŞAK-TURKEY
► Zindan Mağarası-Dungeon Cave-Aksu-ISPARTA-TURKEY
► ASKLEPİON & ROMA AMFİ TİYATROSU-Bergama-İZMİR/ TURKEY
► BURDUR ARKEOLOJİ MÜZESİ-ARCHEOLOGİCAL MUSEUM OF BURDUR-BURDUR/TURKEY
Kızıl Avlu-The Red Hall /Mısır Tanrıları Tapınağı-Temple of The Egyptian Gods-Bergama-İZMİR/TURKEY
Taşyaran Vadisi-Taşyaran Valley-Uşak /Turkey
Cendere Köprüsü-Septemius Severus Bridge-Kahta (Sincik)-ADIYAMAN
Perre Antik Kenti-Perre Ancient City-ADIYAMAN/TURKEY
Nemrut Dağı-Mount Nemrut -ADIYAMAN -TURKEY
Karakuş Tümülüsü-Eski Kahta Kalesi-Kahta-Kocahisar-Adıyaman/TURKEY
Arsameia Antik Kenti-Arsameia Ancient City-Kahta-Adıyaman /TURKEY
Adıyaman Arkeoloji Müzesi /Adıyaman Museum-Adıyaman/Turkey
► ► ►Kanala Abone Ol :
► ► ►instagram :
Traditional art drives ceramic industry in Kutahya | Money Talks
The Turkish city of Kutahya has emerged as a global leader in the production of porcelain and ceramic products. It's home to some of the industry's most popular brands. And as Mobin Nasir reports, those businesses owe their success to Kutahya's artists and their distinctive style of tile painting.
Subscribe:
Livestream:
Facebook:
Twitter:
Instagram:
Visit our website:
Ottoman - Kütahya Tiles and Ceramics
Ottoman Kütahya Tiles and Ceramics
Coffe Cups, Coffee Jugs,Tombac Sitil Brazier, Nargile, Waterpipe Sugar Pots, Cups, Ewer, Creamer, Mug, Jug
Ömürlü Ceramics , Turquie ( Full HD )
Ömürlü Ceramics is a family business in Avanos. Ömürlü Ceramics began in 1807 as a family run shop with 2-3 potters and incorporated in 2005. The shop now employs 20-25 potters and artists. As a gallery, Ömürlü displays works from master potters in Konya, Izmir, Iznik, Kütahya, and Istanbul. The shop, built into the side of a mountain, hosted our tour at their workshop for a demonstration of pottery making. The demonstration included throwing pottery using the traditional kick-wheel and the painting, baking and glazing needed to turn clay into a ceramic work of art.
1967 #52 Turkey - Watson Kintner Collection
Cat. Reel 343 1967: Reel 52: Turkey. June 30. Kutahya
A water wheel in the Porsuk River:
End view, side, tubs on wheel.
Cups discharging water into trough and conduit.
Wooden shaft. Bearing. Spokes (100 mm).
Water discharged from tubs to trough (100 mm)
Tubs on wheel dipping into water (100 mm).
End view: shaft, spokes, trough, conduit, discharge of water (100 mm)
Wheel shaft section (100 mm).
Barrage to divert water to wheel.
Women painting large plates: note method of holding brush.
Woman decorating very small vase (cu).
Painted plate.
Three vases: one completed, one stenciled, one plain.
Three finished plates.
Potter making a vase by hand.
Producer: Watson Kintner
Audio/Visual: silent, color
Keywords: Kutahya
All rights are reserved by the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology (Penn Museum). Any use of the footage in productions is forbidden unless rights have been secured by contacting the Penn Museum Archives at 215-898-8304, or email photos@pennmuseum.org
This film and all of the films in the Penn Museum collection are copyrighted by the Penn Museum, and are not in the public domain.
Freer’s Asian Ceramics Reconsidered
Charles Lang Freer acquired his first cache of Asian ceramics in 1892. That initial haul—a hodgepodge of nineteenth-century Japanese wares—contained few masterpieces, but it presaged an enduring obsession with ceramics that grew to include examples from the Islamic world as well as all of East Asia. Freer never aspired to amass an encyclopedic array of specimens: his ceramics collection developed as a combination of singular masterpieces and formally harmonious, transhistorical and transcultural groupings.
Renowned for a sharp eye and connoisseurial prowess, Freer nevertheless was far from prescient. Guided by a Gilded Age belief in a “universal art spirit,” Freer’s collecting was limited by the exigencies of the art market and a paucity of specialized knowledge. Even as he acquired ceramics from Japan, China, and the Islamic world that are among the best of their kind, Freer overlooked key areas of Asian ceramic production and overvalued or misattributed others. Curators Massumeh Farhad, Louise Cort, and Jan Stuart reflect on the legacy of Freer’s ceramics collection, putting the museum founder’s hits and misses into context.
This talk is part of the series The Freer Story, celebrating the reopening of the Freer Gallery of Art.
Massumeh Farhad, chief curator and the Ebrahimi Family Curator of Persian, Arab, and Turkish Art, joined the Freer|Sackler in 1995 as associate curator of Islamic art. She is a specialist in the arts of the book from sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Iran.
Louise Cort, curator for ceramics, is interested in historical and contemporary ceramics in Japan and South and Southeast Asia, and the Japanese tea ceremony (chanoyu). She received the thirty-third Koyama Fujio Memorial Prize and the Smithsonian Distinguished Scholar Award in 2012.
Jan Stuart, the Melvin R. Seiden Curator of Chinese Art, returned to the Freer|Sackler in 2014 after serving as Keeper of Asia at the British Museum for eight years. Her work focuses on decorative and court arts, as seen in The Last Empresses of China, an exhibition borrowing from the Palace Museum and cocurated with Daisy Wang (opening March 2019).
Saturday, April 14, 2018, 2PM
Meyer Auditorium
Freer Gallery of Art
Smithsonian Institution
Hayalimdeki Çiniler | Fun With Ceramics
Pera Eğitim'in 11 -- 27 Temmuz 2012 tarihlerinde Yaz Dönemi Eğitim Etkinlikleri kapsamında 7-14 yaş grupları için hazırlanan Pera Müzesi'nde Yaz Dönemi Eğitim Etkinlikleri programında çocuklar, Pera Müzesi'nde devam eden sergilerden Kesişen Dünyalar: Elçiler ve Ressamlar, Kütahya Çini ve Seramikleri ve Goya: Zamanının Tanığı, Gravürler ve Resimler'i izlemenin yanı sıra eğlenceli atölyelere katılacaklar ve bir yandan da Pera Müzesi'nin tarihi mimarisini tanıyarak alanında kendi tasarımlarını oluşturma fırsatı da bulacaklar.
HAYALİMDEKİ ÇİNİLER
Kütahya Çini ve Seramikleri Koleksiyon sergisini eğitmen eşliğinde gezen çocuklar atölyede öncelikle aydınger kağıdında eskizler oluşturacak sonrasında ise, asetat kalemi ve cam boyası kullanarak asetat ve fayansın üzerine kendi özgün çinilerini tasarlayarak iki farklı çalışma yapacaklar.
Detaylı bilgi ve rezervasyon için:
0212 334 99 00 (4)
egitim@peramuzesi.org.tr
****
Pera Education's summer program, geared towards 7-14 year-olds and created as part of the summer season education events, will take place between 11 -- 27 July 2012. In this program, children will have a chance to visit the ongoing exhibitions Intersecting Worlds: Ambassadors and Painters, Kütahya Tiles and Ceramics, and Goya: Witness of His Time -- Engravings and Paintings, in addition to taking part in fun workshops, creating their own designs, and learning about the historic architecture of the museum.
FUN WITH CERAMICS
Viewing the Kütahya Tiles and Ceramics exhibition with their instructor, children will create drawings on tracing paper, and then design two different tiles by using acetate pens and glass dyes.
For more information and to make a reservation:
(0212) 334 99 00 (4)
egitim@peramuzesi.org.tr
Turkish Ceramics (Video HD)
Ephesus Ceramic Production
Rare Ottoman pottery expected to fetch half a million pounds
(22 Oct 2018) LEADIN:
An incredibly rare Ottoman dish is going up for auction for the first time this week.
The lot is expected to fetch up to 500,000 British pounds and is part of Sotheby's Arts of the Islamic World sale.
STORYLINE:
Pottery like this is rarely seen at auction - and so it's expected to fetch a high price.
This Ottoman-era dish could sell for as much as half a million British pounds (650,000 US dollars) when it goes under the hammer at Sotheby's in London this week.
Why the eye-watering price tag? Because it is an early example of Iznik pottery which is exceptionally rare.
Auction house Sotheby's report that it is the lost sibling of four similar dishes which are held in museum collections - including at the Louvre in Paris. And this is the first time it has been up for auction.
It is believed to have been made for the most prestigious dining table of the time.
We think that these dishes were part of services which were commissioned directly from the court by probably Mehmet the Conqueror, says Sotheby's Benedict Carter.
These ones were commissioned for the royal household.
The sultan ruled the Ottoman empire during the 15th century.
He was known to commission work of the highest quality from artists invited to his court.
It's believed pottery like this would have been used for serving lamb dishes.
It's clearly been used because you can see on the surface there are these tiny little abrasions where it's very likely that it was cutlery or some sort of serving tool, says Carter.
The condition in fact is very good. So these would have been used in court for serving at banquets.
The pottery charger is part of a larger auction of Islamic art.
Bidders can compete for a range of pieces from the Middle East, some dating back 1,500 years.
And Carter says some of Sotheby's top lots in recent years have been Ottoman, with their appeal going further than just regional buyers.
We've had buyers from across North America through Europe and beyond, all the way into south east Asia buying in our sale, so it's a truly global market, he says.
The auction will be held in London on October 24.
Find out more about AP Archive:
Twitter:
Facebook:
Google+:
Tumblr:
Instagram:
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Turkey pottery iznik pottery
Turkey pottery iznik pottery
türk çini sanatı
türk çini işleme
pottery
seramik işleme
türkey pottery
#Turkey pottery iznik pottery#
#türk çini sanatı#
#türk çini işleme#
#pottery#
#seramik işleme#
#türkey pottery#
Turkey pottery iznik pottery
türk çini sanatı
türk çini işleme
pottery
seramik işleme
türkey pottery
Islamic pottery 1- with Dr Ghazwan Yaghi
The era of Islamic pottery started around 622. Muslim armies moved rapidly towards Persia, Byzantium, Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Egypt and later Andalusia. The early history of Islamic pottery remains somewhat obscure and speculative as little evidence has survived. Apart from tiles which escaped destruction due to their use in architectural decoration of buildings and mosques, much early medieval pottery vanished.
KÜTAHYA'DA TARIM ALETLERİ MÜZESİ AÇILDI !!!
HG HABER - ( HABERİ TIKLAYINIZ İZLEYİNİZ BEĞENİRSENİZ PAYLAŞINIZ !!! )
Kutahya, a Preserved Antique City in Turkey
It's for non-comercial use , the rights to the shots are reserved by the makers/rights owners
Marmara Çini
Marmara Çini Kütahya
Çini müzesi KÜTAHYA
Created by VideoShow:
Pottery class in ceramic workshop in Turkey
Rick Steves guides participate in a pottery class in ceramic workshop in Turkey
Turkey 1967 Reel 37 of 52
Cat. Reel 328. 1967: Reel 37: Turkey. Avcılar . Zelve. Avanos.
A shelter between walls and hillside.
Wooden door.
Homes with terraces, build into cliffs: household articles.
Animal stall. Stone steps.
Rooms carved out of rock: courtyard, entrance.
Kitchen: niche, stone table.
Door, wooden lock.
Doors, arches, courtyard, slot window (mcu, cu).
New home dug into volcanic cone (mcu, cu).
Church: carved into rock cliff.
Wall painting: Nine scenes of life of Christ (Church).
Collapsed volcanic chimney, general view of city.
Cone, openings for pigeons: note lava level.
Rock cliff: holes for pigeons: the droppings are collected.
Ladder in yard. Houses (pan shot).
Yard between stone walls. Two shovels.
Cones with lava caps.
Cones with three caps.
Cones with caps.
Abandoned town (Zelve).
Stone-pit bread oven.
Christian church carved from cliff: doors, windows, cupola (Zelve).
Pottery at Avanos.
Potter making jugs on rubber kick-wheel: hand tool (film is spotted).
Hand-painting a jug.
Attaching handles to pots: clay water vessel beside each potter.