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  • The British Museum, London. Ceramics from all over the World on display in glass cabinets.
    20090806British MuseumAG.jpg
  • The British Museum, London. Ceramics from all over the World on display in glass cabinets.
    20090806British MuseumAH.jpg
  • The British Museum, London. Ceramics from all over the World on display in glass cabinets.
    20090806British MuseumAF.jpg
  • Ceramic pots for sale in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 097_corbis.jpg
  • Ceramic pots for sale in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 083.jpg
  • Stall owners with famous waving Mao Zedong statues for sale in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably. Mao Zedong, commonly known as Chairman Mao, was a Chinese communist revolutionary who became the founding father of the Peoples Republic of China, which he ruled as the Chairman of the Communist Party.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 094_corbis.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 090.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 089.jpg
  • Brightly coloured jewellery made from coral and turquoise for sale at the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 080_alamy.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 079.jpg
  • Marble, carved chops for sale in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 077_alamy.jpg
  • A potter working with clay at his wheel in Pinmore ceramics gallery, Girvan, Ayrshire.
    08-pottery_2675.jpg
  • Famous waving Mao Zedong statues for sale in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably. Mao Zedong, commonly known as Chairman Mao, was a Chinese communist revolutionary who became the founding father of the Peoples Republic of China, which he ruled as the Chairman of the Communist Party.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 092_alamy.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 087.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 081.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 078.jpg
  • Marble, carved chops for sale in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 075_alamy.jpg
  • Stall owners in the indoor antique market in Yu Yuan Garden, downtown Shanghai, China. The pots and ceramics being sold by this family business on the top floor of the market are not genuine antiques. Many are fakes, which are sold to the more gullible tourists. Genuine antiques can be bought but the prices reflect their age considerably.
    2005-07-02 shanghai 076.jpg
  • A potter working with clay at his wheel in Pinmore ceramics gallery, Girvan, Ayrshire.
    08-pottery_2681.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028344cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028363cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028362cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028354cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028340cc_1.jpg
  • Making a ceramic pot using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028337cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    S0313631cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman making ceramic pots using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3760cc_1.jpg
  • Hindu Cham women making a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3750cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027764cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman making a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027655cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3608cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027765cc_1.jpg
  • Hand-making ceramic pots using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027762cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman makes a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027754cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman preparing clay to make a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027656cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman making a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027649cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman making a ceramic barbeque using a traditional method in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027460cc_1.jpg
  • Firing hand-made ceramic pots and barbeques in Duc Binh, a Hindu Cham village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027425cc_1.jpg
  • Women removing fired ceramic pots and barbeques in Duc Binh, a Hindu Cham village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027452cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman holds a newly-fired ceramic pot made using a traditional method outside a mud house in Duc Binh village, Binh Thuan province in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027450cc_1.jpg
  • A portrait of ceramicist Janice Tchalenko at home in April 1987 at her home in south London, UK. Janice Tchalenko 1942- was born in Rugby, Warwickshire. She is a ceramic artist best known for her success in translating decorative studio pottery into designs for batch and large-scale production.
    janice_tchalenko-01-04-1987.jpg
  • Clay for making a ceramic pot using a traditional method in the famous Hindu Cham pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027770cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham woman holds a newly-fired ceramic pot made using a traditional method in Duc Binh village in Binh Thuan province, Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    A0027448cc_1.jpg
  • Andalucian ceramic tiling showing Jesus on a church wall in Seville. Beneath the growing Seville oranges that are ripening on their tree in the street below, we see a downbeat Jesus in a gloriously religious context.
    seville_icons-4-18-April-2011_1_1.jpg
  • Andalucian ceramic tiling of the Virgin Mary and baby Jesus on the wall of the Basilica de la Macarena in Seville. Inside the church, the Basilica de la Macarena possesses the most revered image in Seville, "The Virgin of Hope" (Nuestra Señora de la Esperanza) which locals call La Macarena.
    seville_icons-1-18-April-2011_1_1.jpg
  • A woman holds a handmade pot made using a wheel in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang. In Ban Chan age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets.
    A0028366cc_1.jpg
  • A Hindu Cham potter in the famous pottery village of Bau Truc in Central Vietnam. Cham potters do not use a wheel to make pots, instead clay is pressed into shape using the hands. Layers of clay are added to the original piece and the potter moves around the object, pressing the clay into the desired shape. They are then put directly in the sun and completely bone dried, making them ready to be fired. Firing is done in an open pit with temperatures going up to 800 degree Celcius. The pots are arranged together and covered with layers of rice straw, which is set on fire.
    DSCF3597cc_1.jpg
  • Handmade pots drying in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets
    A0028333cc_1.jpg
  • Handmade pots drying in the specialist pottery village of Ban Chan, 3 km from the heritage city of Luang Prabang, where age old traditions and methods continue to be used for producing pottery both for local use and commercial markets
    A0028332cc_1.jpg
  • The marketplace in the ancient walled city of Harar,  Situated in Eastern Ethiopia it is considered to be the fourth  holiest city in Islam with 82 mosques. It is a major commercial centre linked by trade routes with the rest of Ethiopia and the entire Horn of Africa.  Ethiopia
    MAA-10095046_1.jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3388cc_1_1.jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3391_1_1.jpg
  • Portrait of a woman in her workshop in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3407cc_1_1.jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3393cc_1_1.jpg
  • Hand making a clay pot in Kyauk Daing pottery village on the banks of Inle Lake on 21st January 2016 in Shan State, Myanmar
    DSCF3385cc_1_1.jpg
  • The artist Janice Tchalenko throws a pot in her home studio in south London. With past creation on shelves behind, she smooths the sides of a vessel as it turns on the wheel. Tchalenko studied at Putney School of Art and Harrow School of Art then taught at Camberwell School of Art. She specialized in undecorated domestic stoneware and developed a reputation as a highly competent thrower. In the late 1970s she discovered she also had a talent for decoration and started making high-fired stoneware with bright and colourful designs. She became a tutor at the Royal College of Art in 1981 and this was shortly followed by two exhibitions - one with John Hinchcliffe the textile designer and the other as a one-woman show at the Blum Helman Gallery in New York - that established her as one of the top British potters.
    janice_tchalenko-12-04-1989_1.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water container on the streets of Yangon in Myanmar on 19th March 2016
    DSCF8102cc_1_1.jpg
  • Pheng prepares an indigo dye bath in traditional ceramic pots for dyeing cotton skeins in the Tai Lue village of Ban Viengkao, Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. Indigo dye is made from the fresh leaves and stem of the indigo plant which are fermented and then mixed with limestone to turn it the distinctive blue colour. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    A0029159cc_1.jpg
  • Pheng dyeing homegrown cotton in an indigo dye bath in traditional ceramic pots in the Tai Lue village of Ban Viengkao, Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. Indigo dye is made from the fresh leaves and stem of the indigo plant which are fermented and then mixed with limestone to turn it the distinctive blue colour. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    A0029157cc_1.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th November, 2014. Crowds gather on Armistice Day to see the final poppy planted at the Tower of London, and to join in a two minute silence. 888,246 ceramic remebrance poppies have been planted. One for each life lost in the First World War. The installation has been made by Created by ceramic artist Paul Cummins, with setting by stage designer Tom Piper, and thousands of volunteers.
    20141111_poppies_F.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th November, 2014. Crowds gather on Armistice Day to see the final poppy planted at the Tower of London, and to join in a two minute silence. 888,246 ceramic remebrance poppies have been planted. One for each life lost in the First World War. The installation has been made by Created by ceramic artist Paul Cummins, with setting by stage designer Tom Piper, and thousands of volunteers.
    20141111_poppies_E.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th November, 2014. Crowds gather on Armistice Day to see the final poppy planted at the Tower of London, and to join in a two minute silence. 888,246 ceramic remebrance poppies have been planted. One for each life lost in the First World War. The installation has been made by Created by ceramic artist Paul Cummins, with setting by stage designer Tom Piper, and thousands of volunteers.
    20141111_poppies_D.jpg
  • Tower of London. 888,246 ceramic remebrance poppies are being planted. One for each life lost in the First World War. The installation has been made by Created by ceramic artist Paul Cummins, with setting by stage designer Tom Piper, and thousands of volunteers.
    20140803_poppies_A.jpg
  • A worker mixing coal dust with her feet for making bricks for burning in the kilns, Bat Trang ceramic making village, Hanoi; Vietnam. With Vietnam’s growing population making less land available for farmers to work, families unable to sustain themselves are turning to the creation of various products in rural areas.  These ‘craft’ villages specialise in a single product or activity, anything from palm leaf hats to incense sticks, or from noodle making to snake-catching. Some of these ‘craft’ villages date back hundreds of years, whilst others are a more recent response to enable rural farmers to earn much needed extra income.
    34 Bat Trang_1.jpg
  • Pheng prepares an indigo dye bath in traditional ceramic pots for dyeing cotton fabric in the Tai Lue village of Ban Viengkao, Sayaboury province, Lao PDR. Indigo dye is made from the fresh leaves and stem of the indigo plant which are fermented and then mixed with limestone to turn it the distinctive blue colour. One of the most ethnically diverse countries in Southeast Asia, Laos has 49 officially recognised ethnic groups although there are many more self-identified and sub groups. These groups are distinguished by their own customs, beliefs and rituals.
    A0029154cc_1.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th November, 2014. Final roll of honour is read out as crowds gather on Armistice Day to see the final poppy planted at the Tower of London, and to join in a two minute silence. 888,246 ceramic remebrance poppies have been planted. One for each life lost in the First World War. The installation has been made by Created by ceramic artist Paul Cummins, with setting by stage designer Tom Piper, and thousands of volunteers.
    20141111_poppies_C.jpg
  • London, UK. 11th November, 2014. Crowds gather on Armistice Day to see the final poppy planted at the Tower of London, and to join in a two minute silence. 888,246 ceramic remebrance poppies have been planted. One for each life lost in the First World War. The installation has been made by Created by ceramic artist Paul Cummins, with setting by stage designer Tom Piper, and thousands of volunteers.
    20141111_poppies_A.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water containers on the streets of Bagan, Myanmar (Burma).
    A0014960cc_1.jpg
  • A ceramic drinking water container in a Buddhist temple in Insein in the suburbs of Yangon in Myanmar on 17th May 2016
    DSCF9894cc_1.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water containers on the streets of Bagan, Myanmar (Burma).
    A0014981cc_1.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water containers with plastic cups on the streets of Bagan, Myanmar (Burma).
    A0014977cc_1.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water containers with plastic cups on the streets of Bagan, Myanmar (Burma).
    A0014962cc_1.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water containers on the streets of Bagan, Myanmar (Burma).
    A0014875cc_1.jpg
  • Public ceramic drinking water container resting in an old tree on the streets of Bagan, Myanmar (Burma).
    A0014975cc_1.jpg
  • Kitchen interior in a traditional village house in Yen So, Ha Tay province, Vietnam.
    25030002_1.jpg
  • A Bai ethnic minority man makes clay roof tiles by hand, Dian Nan village, Yunnan Province, China
    369-10_1.jpg
  • A Bai ethnic minority man makes clay roof tiles by hand, Dian Nan village, Yunnan Province, China
    369-16_1.jpg
  • Jawid, a third year Ceramics student from Istalif, working on a kick-wheel in the Ceramics School.  Jawid is one of fifteen trainee potters working at Turquoise Mountain to improve his skills in glaze and clay techniques.  This new knowledge will help Jawid to attract new business and make high quality pots when he graduates from the three-year programme. The Turquoise Mountain Foundation is a non-profit, non-governmental organization which invests in Afghanistan’s traditional crafts, historic building and landscapes in order to preserve cultural heritage, improve living conditions and create economic opportunities.
    afghan20_10_056_1.jpg
  • The Ohr-OKeefe Museum Of Art dedicated to the ceramics of George E. Ohr, the self-proclaimed Mad Potter of Biloxi on 8th March, 2020 in Biloxi, Mississippi, United States. The five-building museum campus was designed by architect Frank Gehry to dance with the ancient live oak trees on the 4-acre site.
    _E6A7805.jpg
  • The Ohr-OKeefe Museum Of Art dedicated to the ceramics of George E. Ohr, the self-proclaimed Mad Potter of Biloxi on 8th March, 2020 in Biloxi, Mississippi, United States. The five-building museum campus was designed by architect Frank Gehry to dance with the ancient live oak trees on the 4-acre site.
    _E6A7789.jpg
  • Stained Glass Galleries. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumR.jpg
  • Visitors vie 'Mankind' by Eric Gill, a marble nude. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumJ.jpg
  • Visitors in the Sculptire galleries. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumC.jpg
  • Visitors outside in the sunshine at The John Madejski Garden. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumA.jpg
  • Grand Entrance to the Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumZ.jpg
  • Medieval & Renaissance 1350-1600. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumY.jpg
  • The Cast Courts. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumV.jpg
  • The statue of Michelangelo’s David was originally presented to Queen Victoria by the Grand Duke of Tuscany in 1857, but was immediately given by the queen to the Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumU.jpg
  • The statue of Michelangelo’s David was originally presented to Queen Victoria by the Grand Duke of Tuscany in 1857, but was immediately given by the queen to the Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumT.jpg
  • Visitors at the Sacred Silver Galleries. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumS.jpg
  • The Cast Courts. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumO.jpg
  • Medieval & Renaissance 1350-1600. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumN.jpg
  • Grand Entrance to the Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumM.jpg
  • Grand Entrance to the Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumL.jpg
  • Visitors vie 'Mankind' by Eric Gill, a marble nude. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumI.jpg
  • Visitors in the Sculptire galleries. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumH.jpg
  • Visitors in the Sculptire galleries. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumG.jpg
  • Peasant Woman Nursing a Baby 1873, by Aime-Jules Dalou. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumF.jpg
  • Peasant Woman Nursing a Baby 1873, by Aime-Jules Dalou. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumE.jpg
  • Visitors in the Sculptire galleries. The Victoria and Albert Museum aka the V&A at South Kensington, London. Known as the world's greatest museum of art and design, with collections unrivalled in their scope and diversity. Discover 3000 years' worth of amazing artefacts from many of the world's richest cultures including ceramics, furniture, fashion, glass, jewellery, metalwork, photographs, sculpture, textiles and paintings.
    20100305V&A MuseumD.jpg
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