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In many of the Cyprian vases having a geometric decoration, the figures
are not painted on the surface but impressed or incised. Messrs. Perrot
and Chipiez regard this form of ornamentation as the earliest; but the
beauty and finish of several vases on which it occurs is against the supposition.
There is scarcely to be found, even in the range of Greek art, a more
elegant form than that of the jug in black clay brought by General Di
Cesnola from Alambra and figured both in his "Cyprus" and in
the "Histoire de l'Art." Yet its ornamentation is incised. If,
then, incised patterning preceded painted in Phoenicia, at any rate it
held its ground after painting was introduced, and continued in vogue
even to the time when Greek taste had largely influenced Phoenician art
of every description.
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