1. Introduction Pottery marks—small incised, painted, impressed, or stamped symbols on ceramic objects—have long served as critical evidence for dating, authenticating, and attributing works of pottery and porcelain. From ancient amphorae to 18th-century Meissen porcelain to 20th-century studio pottery, these marks encode information about manufacturer, artist, factory, pattern, date, and even quality control.
A is a structured digital or physical repository that collects, organizes, and provides access to these marks along with metadata (e.g., origin, time period, material, dimensions, references). Over the last two decades, the proliferation of online databases and digital imaging has revolutionized how collectors, auction houses, archaeologists, museum curators, and art historians identify and research ceramic artifacts. pottery marks database
Word count: approx. 2,850 (suitable for a long, detailed treatment). A is a structured digital or physical repository
While several excellent resources exist (The Marks Project, Kovels, British Museum), the field remains fragmented. Future advances in computer vision, AI similarity search, and linked open data promise to create a truly universal ceramic mark reference. However, challenges of funding, image rights, and long-tail data scarcity persist. The ideal system would be open-access, collaboratively curated, and capable of recognizing a worn, partial mark as easily as a pristine printed factory logo. 2,850 (suitable for a long, detailed treatment)