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The DAACS Stylistic Element Initiative is based on recording three dimensions of variation for each unique decorative element on a sherd: |
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The qualifier "unique" is important here. It means that if a sherd has two or more stylistic elements with identical values for Interior/Exterior, Location, Technique, Applied Color and Stylistic Element, the combination is only recorded once. We began this initiative by looking at whole vessel patterns from collections at the Smithsonian, the DeWitt Wallace Decorative Arts Museum, the Alexandria Archaeology Museum and the archaeological study collections at Poplar Forest, Colonial Williamsburg, and Monticello. After getting a sense of the extensive variation in stylistic elements both within and between ware types, we focused our naming conventions on specific decorative band and garland types, as well as naming individual elements. DAACS staff records all variation in band and garland styles but maintains more general descriptions for individual elements such as flowers, boats, buildings, etc. It was unwieldy to describe every type of flower, building-type and so forth. In addition, Stylistic Elements are not recorded for transferprinted sherds. The location and color of transferprint decoration is recorded but the Stylistic Element field is "Not Applicable". To date DAACS analysts have identified over 400 stylistic elements. The Stylistic Element glossaries to the right provide images and written descriptions of every stylistic element in the DAACS database. They also provide examples of how each element is cataloged in the database. It is our hope that this project will become a viable way for archaeologists to record specific decorative elements on historic ceramics that will facilitate new analyses relating to temporal variation in ceramics and consumer choice. This project is still very much a work in progress. New stylistic elements are added with every new site analyzed. We encourage you to contact us with comments or suggestions.
The Motif field also provides a way to group individual stylistic elements into larger, thematic groups that occur on a single sherd or vessel. Motif was included in the database as a way for analysts to acknowledge that stylistic elements often work together to create larger decorative motifs or scenes. In this example, the Boat and Bridge elements are part of a Scene Combination while the Spearhead Band is its own individual element separate from the central scene. Please see the Ceramic section of the DAACS Cataloging Manual for detailed information on the Motif field. Researchers interested in using Stylistic Element data in the Related Data Format will find it most useful to run Artifact Query 5, an advanced artifact query. Users can select the fields they wish to use, thereby creating a stylistic element dataset perfect for downloading and using with their favorite statistical package. Users who select to view and download data in the Concatenated Data Format will receive easy-to-use data sets that do not contain multiple records for a single record. |
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