They call them Aldo’s fish. The brightly colored, distinctly midcentury patterns on the plates at Villa Bologna Pottery in Malta were designed by Aldo Cremona, who worked there for more than 70 years.
Our prehistoric ancestors were probably fond of porridge, had a way to make cheese and were already using a system to store crops after the harvest, a new study of archaeological remains from the ...
An exhibition presenting the results of a scientific investigation of materials and techniques used in pottery making during Maltese prehistory is now open at the National Museum of Archaeology. The ...