The
Orientalizing manner is most apparent in the earliest phase of bucchero production which also is distinguished by the remarkable thinness of the walls of the vessels. Known as
bucchero sottile, or delicate bucchero, this ware represents a technical achievement elevating the potters who turned them to the ranks of the very finest
ceramicists. So thin-walled are some of bucchero sottile vessels (in some cases, less than 2mm in thickness), such as the products of the
Cornacchiola Tomb Potter of Caere, that it is probable that they were turned specifically for funereal purposes rather than for general household use. On the other hand, the broad distribution of bucchero
sherds at ancient Caere,
Veii, and
Tarquinia and at other area sites points to less extreme examples of bucchero sottile as having had a more practical function in the daily life of the Etruscans. with relief decoration, early 6th century BC
(Louvre) During the
Archaic period, the ever-increasing impact of the
Greek aesthetic on Etruscan culture can be noted in the influence of Greek vase shapes on the design choices of the bucchero potters. Etruscan potters, however, made their own contributions to the
Hellenic ceramic vocabulary by adding the form of the two-handled drinking cup, the
kantharos, and that of the related single-handled cup, the
kyathos, to the list of Greek vase types. The
Nikosthenic amphora with its wide, flat handles was yet another example of Greek potters looking to Etruscan prototypes. The bucchero wares of Etruria even offered some export competition to Greek pottery. In the production of bucchero sottile, the shape of the pot held pride of place, with surface decoration playing a supporting role. When decoration was used, it was usually limited to enhancing the profile of a
chalice, a kantharos, or a kyathos with a row of crisply defined hook notches at the point of
carination. The bowl of an
oinochoe (pitcher) might be emphasized by closely spaced vertical lines incised into the soft clay before firing. Further decoration could be added before the
green ware was loaded into the kiln by using a toothed wheel or a comb-like instrument to create rows of dots arranged in fan patterns. On later examples a roller with recessed reliefs was used to transfer figures of deities or even narratives to the surface of the vessel. During the Orientalizing period and on into the Archaic, bucchero sottile production continued but gradually lost its unique character as Etruria became increasingly Hellenized. As Rome began to nibble away at the territories of southern Etruria, centers for producing bucchero shifted northwards to the cities of
Chiusi and
Vulci. There, during the
Classical period, potters put their stamp upon the bucchero tradition by introducing a new variety of the ceramic known as
bucchero pesante, or heavy bucchero. In this final phase in the history of bucchero pottery, vessel walls become thicker and proportions squatter. The decoration of bucchero pesante ware typically consisted of mold-formed figures applied to the still-damp surface of the pot. By the beginning of the fifth century B.C.E., in part due to the growing availability of the elegant pottery of Greece, the demand for native bucchero ware was in a steep decline. Bucchero no longer was exported and, at home, consumers preferred the colorful pottery of the Greek artisans with their narrative and figurative panels. Etruscan potters now devoted their attention to the production of provincial imitations of Greek red-figure vases. Image:Museo_archeologico_di_Firenze,_Oinochoe_con_testa_di_toro,_Chiusi_prima_met%C3%A0_del_VI_sec._a.c._1.JPG|Bull-headed oinochoe (Chiusi, 6th century BC) File:MMA etruscan plate 5.jpg|Plate (Metropolitan Museum of Art) File:Cup MET 969143.jpg|Cup banded with human and animal figures, first half of 6th century BCE File:Bucchero kantharos Terme.jpg|Kantharos (3rd or 4th
Latial Period, cemetery at Osteria dell'Osa) Image:Bucchero_oinochoe_Terme.jpg|Oinochoe from the same site File:Volterra Black-glazed oinochoe.jpg|Oinochoe (latter 4th century BC,
Volterra) File:Foculo in bucchero da chiusi, periodo arcaico, 580-510 ac ca. 01.JPG|Etruscan Bucchero
Focolare (funerary offering tray) from Chiusi A Tomb Group 550-500 BCE at the
Art Institute of Chicago File:Louvre-Lens - Les Étrusques et la Méditerranée - 106 - Cité du Vatican, musée grégorien étrusque, inv. 20245 (Pyxide ornée de protomées de taureau) (A1).jpg|Etruscan offering vessel with bovine protomes at the
Gregorian Etruscan Museum File:MANO - Bucchero 2 Rhyton.jpg|Bucchero
rhyton from the necropolis of Cucifisso del Tufo at the NAM Orvieto 6th century BCE File:Oinochoai in bucchero con decorazione a stampo, 550-500 ac ca. 03.jpg|
Oinochoe with mold decoration, 550-500 BCE File:Kyathos in bucchero con uomo tra leoni, dalla tomba 1 del tumulo di s. paolo, 670-650 ac ca.jpg|
Kyathos in bucchero with man among lions, from tomb 1 of the mound of S. Paul, 670-650 BCE now
National Etruscan Museum in the
Villa Giulia in Rome File:Cup in the form of a head of a pig MET 132324a.jpg|Etruscan cup in the form of a pig at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art ==References==