Archeology / Museum / Event

Based on the condition of the vessel ensemble from Raddusch, one of the most interesting vessel finds in the collection of the Museum of Prehistory and Early History in Berlin, the artist Uli Aigner presents the transformation of this vessel set into her working material porcelain, whereby the form, structure and function of the vessels of the Late Bronze Age vessel set are preserved and can be tried out in the present.

Vessel inventory of the Late Bronze Age complex from Raddusch

Photo © Klaus Göken, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Museum für Vor- und Frühgeschichte

One Million—Edition Radduschfund

Photo © Michal Kosakowski

Raddusch event with curator Benjamin Wehry and members of the FAGUA Association,
New Museum, Berlin

Photos © Michal Kosakowski

“Uli Aigner brings together her object, the user and the storage location of all vessels in a digital world map. In this way, she connects what archaeologists otherwise have to laboriously research.”

—Matthias Wemhoff, director of the Museum of Prehistory and Early History

Item 8017
Bowl / Omphalos
H × D: 4 × 13 cm / 1.5 × 5 in
Limoges porcelain, transparent glazed

Photo © Tom McCallie

Item 8022
Bowl / Omphalos
H × D: 3 × 15 cm / 1 × 6 in
Limoges porcelain, transparent glazed

Photo © Tom McCallie

Item 8044
Bowl / Omphalos
H × D: 4 × 14 cm / 1.5 × 5.5 in
Limoges porcelain, transparent glazed

Photo © Tom McCallie

Item 8066
Bowl / Omphalos
H × D: 4 × 13 cm / 1.5 × 5 in
Limoges porcelain, transparent glazed

Photo © Tom McCallie

Item 8111
Jug with handle / large XL
H × D: 16 × 20 cm / 6 × 8 in
Limoges porcelain, transparent glazed

Photo © Tom McCallie

Item 8116
Jug with handle / large
H × D: 11 × 20 cm / 4.5 × 8 in
Limoges porcelain, transparent glazed

Photo © Tom McCallie

One Million—Edition Radduschfund

All items of this edition