As part of his fellowship, Dr. Sebastiani is directing major Roman excavations in the area of Alberese, near Grosseto, in southern Tuscany, one of the earliest glassmaking sites in Italy. He will use the Rakow Grant in his study of an assemblage of glass vessels recovered at the nearby site of Spolverino during the excavations of a complex of Roman industrial workshops. The excavations were conducted by the Alberese Archaeological Project between 2010 and 2013. The project is intended to identify two possible glass workshops in central Italy.
“The glass finds recovered could possibly suggest the presence of a production center,” Dr. Sebastiani says. “The study will provide a systematic analysis of the structures, a detailed catalog of the glass vessels, and all the material culture recovered during the excavations.”
Spolverino was a river port settlement on the Ombrone River, and the project was established to understand its nature and its relationship with the nearby temple area dedicated to Diana Umbronensis. Four years of excavations have uncovered what Dr. Sebastiani describes as “an exceptional settlement,” consisting of a series of workshops that produced iron and lead ingots, bronze objects, and possibly glass vessels. The workshop complex, which appears to have been continuously active between the first and sixth centuries, has at least 13 rooms, each of which was devoted to a particular type of manufacture.
“The workshop complex included at least two possible glass workshops,” Dr. Sebastiani explains. “Both were equipped with circular blowing kilns and dolia to store fresh water. In the third century A.D., a massive, circular structure, possibly a kiln, was built, and part of this project is to understand its function. . . . The size of the furnace [D. 4 m] could be indicative of the volume of the production at the site between the third and mid-fifth centuries. Around the area of the main furnaces, a quantity of vessel and window glass has been recovered, which dates from the second to late fifth centuries. A preliminary analysis of the glass assemblage suggests, firstly, that the putative production could have relied on recycling of older material and, secondly, that this was carried out in a process of selective use of colors and specific parts of older vessels.”
Ms. Hodgkinson, who has worked at a number of sites in Egypt, will apply her share of the Rakow Grant to a project involving the re-excavation of part of a house in the Main City South at Amarna. The goal of the project is to determine the purpose of a kiln that was found attached to the house by the Egypt Exploration Society in 1922.
“An important question,” she says, “is whether glass-working or -making, or indeed faience production, took place [there]. The ultimate aim is to establish what the role of [the building] was in the wider urban context and how it may have interacted with other industrial sites at Amarna.”
Finds associated with the building include glass, “slag,” and cylindrical pottery vessels, which Ms. Hodgkinson says “can be taken as evidence of the working of glass into finished objects. The area occupied by the kiln is still visible on the surface, where much vitrified mud-brick, an indicator of high-temperature firing, can be found, as well as fragments of cylindrical vessels, understood to have been used as molds for glass ingots in the Late Bronze Age.”
Dr. Sebastiani, who received his Ph.D. from the University of Siena, is also a consulting scholar at the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology in Philadelphia, and vice president of the Grosseto Cultural Foundation. He has published several articles and papers on Roman cities and urbanism, medieval monasteries, and pottery studies.
Ms. Hodgkinson, who has submitted her dissertation, titled “Royal Cities of the New Kingdom: A Spatial Analysis of Production and Socio-Economics in Late Bronze Age Egypt,” has contributed to published fieldwork reports and analyses of archaeological material from the sites on which she has worked. She was employed in British commercial archaeology for six years, and her museum experience includes volunteer work in the Egyptology departments of Bolton Museum in the United Kingdom and the Roemer- und Pelizaeus-Museum in Hildesheim, Germany.
The Rakow Grant for Glass Research was founded by the late Dr. and Mrs. Leonard S. Rakow, who were Fellows, friends, and benefactors of The Corning Museum of Glass. It is awarded annually to support scholarly research on the history of glass and glassmaking. Additional information about the grant is printed at the front of this publication, and is available on the Museum’s Web site.
About The Corning Museum of Glass
The Corning Museum of Glass is home to the world’s most important collection of glass, including the finest examples of glassmaking spanning 3,500 years. Live glassblowing demonstrations (offered at the Museum, on the road, and at sea on Celebrity Cruises) bring the material to life. Daily Make Your Own Glass experiences at the Museum enable visitors to create work in a state-of-the-art glassmaking studio. The campus in Corning includes a year-round glassmaking school, The Studio, and the Rakow Research Library, the world’s preeminent collection of materials on the art and history of glass. Located in the heart of the Finger Lakes Wine Country of New York State, the Museum is open daily, year-round. Kids and teens, 19 and under, receive free admission.
The Museum is currently adding a North Wing, designed by Thomas Phifer, which will open in late 2014. The 100,000-square-foot North Wing addition will include a new 26,000-square-foot contemporary art gallery building, as well as one of the world’s largest facilities for glassblowing demonstrations and live glass design sessions.
The Corning Museum of Glass
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Corning, NY 14830
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