ClassificationsAncient Near Eastern Art
Cone for Mosaic Wall Decoration
AAT Object Form/FunctionWall Tile (Tile)
AAT Object Form/FunctionDecoration (Process)
Place FoundUruk, Iraq, Asia
CultureSumerian
PeriodUruk Period
Date3300-3000 BCE
MediumClay
Credit LineCollected by William A. Shelton, funded by John A. Manget
Dimensions3 3/4 x 1 1/8 in. (9.5 x 2.8 cm)
Object number1921.145
Label TextThe abundance of mudbrick and the general lack of good timber and stone in Mesopotamia helped shape the development of architectural forms and decoration. During the later fourth millennium, Mesopotamian builders often enriched the walls of temples with tens of thousands of small clay cones. Sometimes dipped in black or red pigment, these cones were inserted side by side in a thick mud plaster to form mosaic-like patterns with geometric designs of zigzags, lozenges, and triangles.Exhibition HistoryMCCM Permanent Collection Galleries, May 11, 1993 - Spring 2001
MCCM Permanent Collection Reinstallation, September 2001- February 12, 2018
Michael C. Carlos Museum Morgens West Foundation Galleries of Ancient Near Eastern Art, November 10, 2018 - Present
ProvenanceAcquired for Emory University Museum by William Shelton (1875-1959), ca. 1920.
Status
On viewCollections
- Ancient Egyptian, Nubian, and Near Eastern Art
4000-3100 BCE
3300-3000 BCE
1390-1353 BCE
1539-1077 BCE
1539-1077 BCE
1292-1279 BCE
1-650 CE
20th Century
20th Century
3500-3000 BCE
late 2nd Century CE