THE HISTORY OF METAL ART
Any
artwork that is made from the ‘ores of the
earth,’ including gold, tin, bronze, lead,
silver and iron is well-defined as metal art.
It is also common to get metal art
created from numerous metal alloys, such as aluminum. Metal
art can be either one purely functional or
decorative and useful. In the Initial Bronze Age, for instance, bowls
and cups were hammered from metal – achieving both functional and
decorative purposes.
Importance
of Metal artwork

Ancient
History of Metal Art
In arrears to its
resilient nature, metal art
can be marked out back about as far as archeologists can go –
even as far back as 7000 B.C. Crude artistic activities
(hammered metal) can be done in Bronze Age. Gold, Silver, Iron,
lead, copper and bronze artifacts have been originating at ancient
sites in Troy. Utensils, Metal tools, dishes and even human masks and
figures date back to some of the earliest known civilizations.
In old Egypt, the
unusually advanced Egyptians knew dramatic ways of creating fine
decorative metal art
objects from gold, bronze, and other metals
art. Greatest of the highest treasures to
survive the pyramids and catacombs of Egypt are variants of metal
artwork: extravagant necklaces, beautiful
jewelry, funeral masks, gold coins, and metal records are just a few
of the artifacts presently on display in Cairo. In Greece and Rome,
there were significant figures cast in bronze some used,
inappropriately, as torture devices. Equipment was also made from
metallic substances as well.
Metal
Works of the Medieval Period

French
Metal Artwork
The French original metal
art period occurred simultaneously with the
highest of other decorative arts. They produced remarkable ornaments,
clocks and furniture from gold and bronze that reached near
perfection in design, finish and form. Such precision and careful
craftsmanship were soon to be lost, or at least sternly declined, by
the 19th century.
Italian
Renaissance of Decorative Metal Art
Astonishing reproductions
of miniature classical figurines were made during the Italian
Renaissance. Metal
performers crafted these works of art primarily for interior
decoration. The procedure of production is known as the "lost
wax" (or cire perdue) process, where the
part is originally carved from wax and then covered with molten clay
and left to harden.
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