Bucchero ware
Bucchero is the name given to the distinctive, lustrous black
ware made by the Etruscans during the Orientalizing and Archaic
periods. It is a refined form of Italian impasto pottery, which was
made of unrefined clay, usually formed without the potter's wheel
and fired brown/black. Bucchero was made of purified clay, turned
on a wheel and burnished before firing. During firing, the supply
of oxygen to the kiln was restricted so that the iron oxides in the
clay caused it to turn black. This process (reduction) was probably
assisted by the presence of carbon (organic material) in the kiln,
which the potter deliberately introduced.
Both plain and decorated forms of bucchero were used for all the
popular types of pottery. Early bucchero, beginning about 675-650
BC, was of the finest quality. It was made in elegant shapes with
thin walls often decorated with incised or dotted lines. The main
centres of production were at Cerveteri, Veii and Tarquinia.
Towards the end of the seventh century, elaborate, modelled forms
became popular. During the early sixth century bucchero was often
ornamented with repeating designs impressed with a roller-stamp.
The wares of the second half of the sixth and early fifth century
feature heavy decoration in relief. Centres of production were at
Chiusi and Volterra.