205 75 14MB
English Pages [172] Year 2002
UNDERSTANDING
GREEK VASES
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A GUIDE TO TERMS, STYLES,
AND TECHNIQUES
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DREW
J.
CLARK
MAYA ELSTON
MARY LOUISE HART
*
BOSTON PUBUC LIBRARY Coplev Square
'
UNDERSTANDING
REEK GUIDE TO TERMS, STYLES, AND TECHNIQUES
Up wm. _
ANDREW
J.
CLARK
MAYA ELSTON
THE
J.
MARY LOUISE HART
PAUL GETTY
MUSEUM
LOS ANGELES
©
2002
J.
Front cover: Fight between the gods and giants in upper
Paul Getty Trust
frieze; series of athletic contests
Getty Publications 1
frieze. Detail of Attic
200 Getty Center Drive
Suite
or training scenes in lower
black-figured volute-krater attrib-
uted to the Leagros Group, about 510-500. Malibu,
jpgm 96.AE.95.
500
Los Angeles, California 90049-1682 Half-title page:
www.getty.edu
Departure of Triptolemos. Detail of Attic
red-figured dinos attributed to the Syleus Painter, active
490-470. Malibu, jpgm 89.AE.73. Christopher Hudson, Publisher
Mark
Greenberg, Editor
in
Chief
Title page: Attic black-figured dinos (detail). See
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Clark,
This page: Corinthian animal style
Andrew J., 1949-
Understanding Greek vases techniques p.
/
Andrew
J.
cm. - (Looking
(detail).
Page 152: Nike crowning the victor :
Clark,
and
a guide to terms, styles,
Maya
Elston,
Mary
(detail).
See
figs.
in
an
See
fig.
fig.
81.
60.
athletic contest
78, 95, 117.
Louise Hart.
Colophon: Herakles battling the Nemean Lion
at)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
See
fig.
(detail).
35.
ISBN 0-89236-599-4 1.
Vases, Greek-Dictionaries.
2.
Vase-painting, Greek-Technique. Louise.
III.
Title.
IV
Series.
NK4645 .C57 2001 738.3'o938-dc2i
2001006214
Pottery-Technique. I.
Elston,
Maya.
II.
Back cover: Youthful
3.
Hart,
Mary
reveler. Detail of
uted kylix (Type B), about
86.AE.280.
510-500
tondo of unattrib-
B.C.
Malibu, jpgm
Contents
Map
vi
Preface
vii
Chronology
ix
Abbreviations
ix
Looking at Greek Ceramics
i
Conservation and Care of Ancient Ceramic Objects
23
Glossary of Attic Potters and Vase-Painters
31
Glossary of Vase Shapes and Technical Terms
65
Select Bibliography
Chart of Vase Shapes Index
[53 1
1
54 5
North
50 mi
Greece, including East Greece, and the Aegean Sea.
Preface
Understanding Greek Vases
is
an expanded volume
of technical guides published by the
J.
museum
signed to provide the general reader and
in the
Looking At
Museum. This
Paul Getty
.
series
.
.
series
was
de-
with a glossary-format
visitor
introduction to the materials and techniques of the art they were "looking at."
However,
as the three of us
ancient Greek ceramics,
worked through
we came
the variety of features comprising
to appreciate the unique qualities of this pro-
duction that had, at separate times and in very different ways, originally inspired
our shared fascination with topic
and to the
it.
We became sensitive to the
At the same time,
painters.
it
became evident
available in a single small, illustrated volume.
want
to
patterns of their potters
stylistic
that concise information
painters, techniques, materials, ornaments, styles,
conservation
vases are conserved, and
The philosophy and
sometimes from hundreds of fragments.
Finally,
how
on
and shapes had never been
also a topic of great interest, especially to
is
know how
intrin-
conception that they could not be properly intro-
duced without an accompanying study of the
and
Greek vases were so
fact that the techniques of ancient
sically tied to their artistic
particular needs of this
museum
practice of
visitors
who
they can be reconstructed,
although ancient Greek cultural
history, subject matter,
and iconography had to remain
largely outside the scope
we knew
that since vases are the basis of
much
of this book,
of
what we know
about ancient Greece, the images would require a brief introduction to
and fascinating
this vast
field.
Understanding Greek Vases thus others in this series.
It
is
a
begins with an essay by
more comprehensive book than
Andrew
J.
Clark on the historic
and cultural context of the production and iconography of Greek
vases, includ-
how and why vases have come written by Maya Elston, includes pre-
ing a brief history of vase scholarship describing to be studied.
The essay on conservation,
viously unpublished information from the
Conservation.
Mary
Museum's Department
Louise Hart organized the illustrations for the book and
wrote the "Glossary of Attic Potters and Vase-Painters. to compile the "Glossary of Vase Shapes
tributing the entries
of Antiquities
1 '
The authors teamed up
and Technical Terms," with Clark con-
on vase shapes, ornaments, and
writing; Elston the sections
on the techniques of potting and painting; and Hart the
definitions of
sr\ listic
and
art-historical terms.
The chart
of vase shapes
was compiled by Elston and Hart
and redrawn by Peggy Sanders. The bibliography
is
intended to provide refer-
ences for further reading.
For reasons of clarity and focus, the
Greek world. Because of
this
this there are
volume contains only material from
no
entries
on Etruscan, Chalkidian,
Caeretan, South Italian, or any other ceramic material not from the physical environs of Greece and her islands. Unless otherwise noted,
(from Athens) and
all
dates are B.C. While
all
works are
Attic
many of the ceramic types and artists Museum, we strove in every case
are represented in the collection of the Getty
most applicable examples from
to use the States.
We
Europe and the United
collections in
are grateful to all the institutions that so generously supplied photo-
graphs; photographic sources are listed in the figure captions.
There are cross-references throughout every
level:
Words
printed in
small capitals
all
the texts to aid readers of
refer to other entries in the
book.
Variants of shapes are listed under the shape's primary name; hence, the description of a
neck-AMPHORA,
for example, will be
found
Additionally, a chronicle of the relationship of potters
in the
amphora
entry.
and vase-painters can be
traced by following the cross-references from one entry to another, and to the
"Looking
at
Greek Ceramics"
essay.
It is
thus the intent of the authors that this
small volume will provide the interested reader with an easily accessible survey of the significant facets of the materials, production,
and conservation of ancient
Greek ceramics.
We would like to thank the Curator of Antiquities, Marion True, and the Head
of the
Department of Antiquities Conservation, Jerry Podany,
for their in-
valuable assistance and observations throughout the preparation of this script.
The
curatorial support staff for the Antiquities
welcome research and fact-checking Assistant
Monica Case
Tovar for organizing the tance;
comments on
ornament
We
the text
to thank his wife, Joan,
Department provided
We would
like to
thank
Staff
for ordering photography; Curatorial Assistant Carrie
entry and providing diligent research assis-
and Antiquities Intern Elizabeth de
fact-finding assistance.
able
assistance:
manu-
Grummond for research, proofing, and
also wish to thank the external readers for their valu-
and
and
illustrations. Finally,
his son,
Andrew J. Clark would
like
Benjamin, for their encouragement during
the preparation of this manuscript. A.
M.
j.
c.
M.
E.
L.
H.
Chronology
Protogeometric
about 1050-900
Geometric
about 900-720
B.C.
B.C.
Protocorinthian and
about 720-620
B.C.
Corinthian
about 620-550
B.C.
Early Archaic black-figure
about 620-570
B.C.
Archaic black-figure
about 570-530
B.C.
about 530-480
B.C.
Early Classical red-figure
about 480-450
B.C.
Classical red-figure
about 450-425
B.C.
Late Classical red-figure
about 425-300
B.C.
Hellenistic
about 300-30
Protoattic black-figure
Late Archaic black-figure and red-figure
B.C.
Abbreviations
Museum
BM
The
cf.
compare
DAI
Deutsches Archaologisches
Diam
diameter
Gr.
Greek
H
height
JPGM
J.
L
length
British
Paul Getty
Institut
Museum
MFA
Museum
MMA
The Metropolitan Museum
no.
number
pi.
plural
of Fine Arts of
An
Figure
i.
Komasts
the dancer on the
(participants in a
left.
about 520-510. H: 60
male drinking party). "As never Euphronios"
Detail of a red-figured
cm
5 (z3 /x
in.).
amphora
Munich,
Staatliche
(Type A) signed by
is
written behind
Euthymides
as painter,
Antikensammlungen und Glyptothek 2307.
Looking at Greek Ceramics
By
the beauty of their shapes
their decoration they rank as
— GISELA With
M.
less
than
works of art.
1
on the vase*
the painting
had drawn
RICHTER
A.
no
finished,
— two dancing men, and
a third
cided what the finishing touch would be.
then wrote on the
left
Euthymides looked waving
He dipped
his
walking
brush
his
at the figures
stick
he
— and de-
in purple-red paint,
one of the dancers, oa ou&e-
side of the picture, next to
— "as never Euphronios," an enigmatic comment about low vase-painter Euphronios, whose talent — either as vase-painter as a dancer — Euthymides apparently claims to surpass
TTOTe Eu(()p6vi09
a
likely,
his felor, less
(fig. i).
These two vase-painters worked sixth century B.C. (about
Greek
tation in
525-500
They were
art.
Athens during the
in
B.C.), a
last
quarter of the
time of great change and experimen-
at the forefront of this trend, heirs to a continu-
ous tradition of vase-painting that stretched back to the beginning of the
Geometric dered
period, about
900
B.C.,
in a linear style (see fig. 90).
when both
and
patterns
figures
were ren-
Vase-painting was set on a course then that,
centuries later, led to the kind of painted pottery produced by Euthymides,
Euphronios, and hundreds of other vase-painters. In ancient
what they were used everyday in the
life.
home
terns, others
No
Greece vases were commonplace: for or
what
meant; pottery was
their pictures
Ceramic vases served as containers,
or for religious rituals.
one needed to be told
Some were decorated with
were plain and painted black
all
just part of
either for utilitarian purposes figures
and
over; unpainted coarse
pat-
ware
sufficed for cooking.
Here our concern region of Attica
is
on vases made
figured vases, with the focus
— dominated by the
city of
Archaic and Classical periods, roughly
Athens and
620-300
B.C.
its
environs
Long known
in the
— during the
as Attic vases,
they are today frequently called Athenian, after their principal place of manufacture. Pottery
was made elsewhere
in
Greece, too, and
in the
*In the terminology of ancient Greek potter) studies, the word vase ma) refer to of any shape, including those that arc partly sculptural, such as mi
ad
\
\m
s
.1
glossary reference
ceramic vessel or container
and Kin
i
\.
—
will be
made
to vases
East Greece, Euboia, and Lakonia. The in
Southern
and
Italy
its
in the
Sicily,
however, are outside the scope of
""^(district) of
[
were made nearby: This deme
Athens was called Kerameis. "Ceramic"
(Kepa(iei3g)
means potter
an adaptation of the Greek
comes from the word
in turn
means
is
tary.
its
More than
From Athens
(see figs. 69, 76, 122).
— as
vases
far afield as Italy,
— and across the Black Sea to the Crimea.
Vases were produced in a broad range of shapes and vase shape had
for pot-
clay vase or pottery in general;
were exported throughout the Mediterranean region France, Spain, Egypt, and Libya
of areas, but
cemetery, which actually took
clay, keramos (Kepauog), which also
kerameus
book.
this
number
city's
kerameikos (KepajieiKog, of pottery), which ter's
in a
cities
fact that vases
immediate neighborhood of the
name, the Kerameikos, from the
Greek
distinctive ceramics of the
potters and vase-painters worked
In Athens,
mainly
Boiotia, Clazomenae, Corinth,
from other places
sizes.
Although each
particular basic uses, those functions were also
employed
a dozen different shapes could be
in
complemen-
connection with
serving and consuming wine, as at the symposium, the male-only drinking party that followed dinner.
The amphora and stamnos were used
for storage; the
dinos, krater, lebes, or stamnos for mixing wine and water; the psykter for cooling wine; the kyathos (or a metal ladle) and the
oinochoe
for serving the
wine; and the kantharos, kylix, mastos, rhyton, or skyphos for drinking
The niques, of
vases were decorated by the painters,
which the two principal ones are black-figure and
these techniques
looking black.
when
figures
colors.
620 in
brownish hue)
it
exception being Corinthian clay, which
becomes yellowish white. Black
is
is
the color of the
was developed by about 700
B.C. in Corinth:
gloss with which the vases were painted.
The The
because
both
a shiny, metallic-
clays turn orange-red (often with a
fired (see firing), the principal
it.
in several tech-
red-figure. In
two colors predominate: deep orange-red and
Most Greek
easily recognizable fired
who worked
black-figure technique
were drawn
in silhouette
and the
The technique was not adopted by
B.C. Red-figure
made
its
details either incised or
it is
in
vase-painters in Athens until about
appearance about a hundred years
Athens about 530 B.c.Essentially
added
later,
the reverse of black-figure:
invented
The back-
ground!** painted black, the figures are reserved, and, for the most part, details are
drawn
figures are
in black.
A
drawn
outline on the whitened surface of the
in
third technique in
niques, see the glossary: Six's
common
use
was ^HTTE^G^^rJ^m The vase. ToFotfier tech-
added color, coral-red, outline
painting, and
TECHNIQUE.
Of
the principal techniques, black-figure in particular
strange to our eyes owing to
LOOKING AT GREEK CERAMICS
its
reliance
on
silhouette
and
may appear
incised details. But
the difference
only
we
ern drawing.
known
to
and white-ground are equally
them because they more
unrealistic,
closely resemble
mod-
2
The ones
illusory: Red-figure
is
more accustomed
are
number
limited
to the Greeks,
paintings on walls and
of colors seen
who employed
wooden
four colors seen on vases
on vases were by no means the only broad range of naturalistic colors
a
panels, very few of
in
which have survived. Of the
— black, orange-red, purple-red, and white — black and
orange-red proved to be esr^crtrttyrhlnfble, likethe firecTclaylTself, able to withstand the high heat of the kiln, the wear-and-tear of everyday use, and centuries of burial. Even breakage will not destroy vases completely; in fact, vase fragments
can be both beautiful and instructive.
Greek vases are no longer everyday objects to be handjed and used; rather, they have
museums,
hibited in
Although the
wards of
total
sixty-five
now
been deprived of their functionality and are art galleries,
number
of
artifacts ex-
and private collections arOund the world.
Greek vases that survive today
thousand Athenian vases are extant;
still,
is
unknown, up-
this figure represents
only a tiny fraction of the original producjion. Ancient Greek vases were in Italy
bly til
by the 1550s a.d., but although the
formed
in the
first
the early 1700s. In the eighteenth century,
came
mythology and
literature
first
when
vases were discovered in large
to be valued especially for the insight they gave into ancient
— an enduring importance of these
vases.
the vases found in Italy were thought to be Etruscan rather than
Greek. That they had been
made by Greeks, however, was
1740s and then endorsed by Johann Joachim Winckelmann of ancient art published in 1764. 3 Yet
were recognized as Greek that stitution to display
it
this idea
was not
came
Greek vases was the
until the
first
in his
by the British ambassador to Naples,
Sir
pioneering study
The
Museum, which
William Hamilton
first
public in-
in
1772 pur-
(see
discovery, beginning in 1828, of thousands of vases in the Etruscan led to the
of
some
Southern
in fig.
town
42).
The
of Vulci
important realization that both the inscriptions and the subject matter
vases were not just Greek, but distinctively Athenian, or Attic. The im-
pact of the Vulci discoveries also supported the efforts of the ian
in the
inscriptions on vases
to be accepted.
British
proposed
chased the more than four hundred vases that had been collected Italy
known
collections were proba-
mid-i6oos, major collections of vases were not assembled un-
quantities, they
At
modepn
Eduard Gerhard, who
evolved into the
German
in
1829 founded
German
a learned society in
Archaeological Institute,
still
today
antiquar-
Rome, which
a leading center for
research in classical archaeology.
By the 1880s scholars had not only recognized the
distinctive style of
black- and red-figured vases from Athens but also distinguished pottery produced
LOOKING AT GREEK CERAMICS
elsewhere in mainland Greece, on the Greek islands, and in western Turkey (an-
(Magna
cient Ionia), Southern Italy
tention focused
Graecia), and Central Italy (Etruria).
on identifying the work of individual
on vases signed by Athenian
red-figure painters
and
artists, studies
based largely
The German
potters.
at-
schol-
ars
Wilhelm
fig.
46) published landmark studies that accurately described and illustrated the
work
Klein, Paul Hartwig, Adolf Furtwangler,
many accomplished
of
and Karl Reichhold
work
of hundreds of Athenian vase-painters using a
stylistic analysis that
and subject matter
tural context of
Greek
Looking likened to
all
aspects of Greek vases
of comparative
human anatomy: mouth,
— not
cul-
and thought.
life
at a vase begins
in separate sections that
— potting, paint-
— and examines the vases within the broad with
its
shape,
whose
structure generally
neck, shoulder, body, and foot
the Greeks called ears. Pots were not always
are not apparent
definitively identified
method
does not depend on signed vases alone (see signatures).
Contemporary scholarship embraces ing, function,
(see
John D.
painters. In the twentieth century Sir
Beazley, considered the foremost expert on Greek vases, the
-
Next
made
in
seams on an
— the handles
one piece but were thrown
were joined together by the potter. The like
is
article of clothing, at
joints themselves
any
rate
—
rather,
the separate parts are usually betrayed by the slight changes in the contour of the
shape: in other words,
its
architecture
— the "interrelation of parts to the whole
and to one another." 4 Observe the sections of the neck-amphora 59, a typical
fig.
example of
this shape:
mouth and neck (thrown
illustrated in
as
one
piece),
handles (made separately and attached), shoulder and body (also thrown as one),
and
foot.
The mouth and
foot are the vase's upper
and lower borders.
stance both are black and of similar size, the diameter of the little
larger than that of the foot. The neck-amphora's
black, are the side borders that
ures in the picture
were very vase.
The
the horizontal limits
do not extend. These
likely instinctive
vertical
mark
ships can be discovered
Nothing
is
beyond which the
painter, not planned
patterns on the neck and under the
mouth and
mouth being only
a
vertical handles, also fig-
relationships are not coincidental, but
on the part of the
portant, for they visually link the picture and the the vase, to the
In this in-
anew
for each
figures are especially im-
body
to the adjacent parts of
neck, above, and to the foot, below. Similar relation-
on most
vases.
more fundamental
to the aesthetic of
Greek vase-painting
than the interplay and balance between the contrasting dark and light areas on a vase, that clay.
is,
between the black painted areas and the orange-red of the unpainted
Look again
mind. The black
at figure 59, is
but this time with the balance of dark and light in
concentrated in the picture, and the picture dominates the
vase. Observe, too, that the
image
LOOKING AT GREEK CERAMICS
is
located
on the widest part
of the
body and
takes up the most space on the vase. This position afforded the painter the largest surface on which to create the picture, and consequently the main pictorial zone
occupies the widest part of most Greek vase shapes. In black-figure, the picture
four sides
is
framed by patterns
— sometimes
on
— as carefully divided from one another as the parts of the vase
all
itself.
In the case of
an amphora potted and painted by Exekias, the master of black-
figure (see
113.25), there
ture
fig.
is
a palmette-lotus chain
on the neck above the
and small tongues on the shoulder; under the handles on the
pic-
sides are
palmettes intertwined with lotus buds; and below the picture, a key, lotus buds
with dots between them, and rays. Within
composed
of painted, that
the vase
not
is
literally
itself
each patterned zone
dark design elements and unpainted
is,
half-dark and half-light, but
it
seems to be
Pictures in red-figure are framed by patterns, too:
develops,
patterns
become
less
Sometimes there are no patterns
and
of the figure:
important to the overall design.
on an amphora where nothing but
motion echoed by the way of the cloth hanging
from
More than any orations
on
vases.
More
As he his
fig.
22).
The blackness
all
specifically,
sings, his
calls attention to the
body sways back and
garment billows around
forth,
his feet
effectively
its
rhythmic
and by the
swirl
other element, the pictures are the most important dec-
— men and women, gods and manner of animals or creatures — but idea of delighted in images
their
ism was by no means identical to ours. They depicted
human and world
figures unceasingly, yet all but ignored representation of the
moved: Landscapes and buildings are rarely more than or essential props (see
who
figure,
the blackness accentuates the
his instrument, a kitbara.
The Greeks
heroes, children, and
However, as red-figure
less
contour of the vase and, more importantly, to the lone
movement
(light) areas;
so.
at all, as
black surrounds a singing poet (see
counterbalances the black.
balanced,
is
figs. 2, 7,
10,
real-
mythological in
which they
isolated ancillary elements
20-21, 24, 28, 33, 34,
56). In vase-painting
three-dimensionality was hardly a consideration: As a rule, figures have no shading to
model
spective
their forms. Generally pictures have
beyond the
illusory sense of
no substantial depth or
per-
foreground and background created by
overlapping or by arranging figures on more than one
level (see figs.
40, 42, 44),
the latter a development inspired by large-scale Athenian wall-paintings of the
fifth
century B.C., none of which has survived. It is
the story-telling aspect of a vase-painting, however, that readily cap-
tures our imagination. This
one inside a kylix
of the
Greek warrior Ajax
who
is
true especially
when
the picture
is
dramatic, such
where we witness Tekmessa's discovery of the dead body
as the
(fig. 2).
Although Ajax was the strongest
participated in the Trojan War, he did not die gloriously
IOOKI\(,
\
I
of the
Greeks
in battle.
Tragic
GREEK CERAMICS
Figure
z.
Tekmessa
covering the corpse of Ajax.
Tondo
of a
red-figured kylix
(Type B) attributed to the
Brygos Painter,
about 490. Malibu,
jpgm 86.AE.286.
events beyond his control forced right in the pebbly
beach
The impact
him
commit
to
suicide:
Troy and threw himself upon
at
Ajax
set his
sword up-
it.
of a narrative picture such as the suicide of Ajax depends
makes
the vase-painter's talent for detail and, in a successful picture, every detail sense.
There
is
no
better
example than another picture
illustrating the
on
Trojan War:
the removal of the corpse of Prince Sarpedon from the battlefield by the winged
brothers Sleep and Death are identified in writing, ter, is
(fig. 3).
In the center
and the vase
is
the
is
god Hermes.
inscribed with the signatures of the pot-
Euxitheos, and the painter, Euphronios.
What makes this
not only the complex and beautifully detailed figures
of Sarpedon lifted
— but also the
up and carried
fact that his
to the right, as
body
is,
is
picture exceptional
— especially the anatomy
actually in motion.
He
is
being
Euphronios indicated by the leftward flow of
blood from Sarpedon's wounds. Realism of
and
All the figures
this
kind seems strikingly modern
admittedly, highly unusual in vase-painting.
Who can
say whether or not
an ancient Greek would have recognized such subtlety? Despite the self-evident beauty of such vase-paintings, however, sential to
work
of
remember
that decorating vases
most vase-painters was
worked within the constraints hand, the
it
would be wrong
word
is
skillful
was
a repetitive craft,
but not necessarily inspired. They
of a formalized
and often formulaic
to think that every vase-painter
used today, that
style that often expresses a
is,
was an
es-
art.
all
On the one
artist in the sense
an individual with a highly developed, personal
personal point of view.
LOOKING AT GREEK CERAMICS
it is
and the routine
The concept was unknown
and possibly unimaginable to the ancient Greeks. art as
we understand
On
manship.
it:
The
closest term
was techne, which meant
level of
craftsman: They are artists
they themselves would have recognized Black-figure, especially about ties
skill
— — and the best painters
modern
in the
for
or crafts-
the other hand, the styles of vase-painters are recognizable
marily on the basis of the details of their drawings
above the
had no word
In fact, they
pririse
whether or not
sense,
it.
575-530
B.C., often
favored the sensibili-
of the miniaturist. Meticulous, delicately incised details and patterns
predom-
inated, a kind of miniaturism seemingly inherent in the character of the incised line itself.
The Amasis Painter
quisite minaturist,
and
his
— who
example
— was an ex-
chiefly decorated small vases
will stand for others of this ilk:
Kleitias, Nearchos, and the Tleson Painter.
An olpe by
Sophilos,
the Amasis Painter dis-
plays his gift for the diminutive in the finely detailed figures of Perseus, the
Gorgon Medusa, and
the
god Hermes
(fig. 4).
For the Amasis Painter, miniatur-
ism often goes hand in hand with symmetry, which, likewise, sign element in black-figure.
but the principle
is
more
The
picture
on the olpe
rigorously applied
;
painter begins to the right of Hermes' cap. Detail of
Bequest of Joseph H. Durkee, Gift
of
.is
Darius
one example of symmetry,
on an amphora where Dionysos
Figure 3. Death of Sarpedon. inscriptions label Sarpedon, and Hermes. Above, Leagros kalos is written ki rROGR \m by Euxitheos as potter and by EUPHRONIOS
is
an important de-
is
.1
Sleep (Hypnos), Death the SIGNATUR] of
red figured cal) \ kk
painter, about
Ogden
by exchange, 197X, [972.H.IO.
Mills
C
\
\i
|
Dianatos
PHRONIOS
I
1
k signed
szo-sio. New York,
and
Gifl of
PAINTERS
Figure 26. Doums Young man pouring wine from an oinochoe into an older man's kylix (Type and Zeus.
about 480. Diam: 32.4
cm
B),
perhaps Ganymede
kylix (Type B) by the potter Python, signed by Douris as painter,
Interior of a red-figured
(12V4
in.).
For the exterior of
this kylix, see figures 58, 102, 130.
Malibu, jpgm 84.AE.569.
500-470
Douris (active approximately
B.C.)
Over three hundred vases have been attributed his
name on more than
fifty
to this painter,
of them. Together with the
who
signed
Brygos Painter,
Onesimos, and Makron, he was one
of the leading red-figure cup-painters
of the Late Archaic period
B.C.).
drew
often
energetic, active figures, yet his
in strong contrast to the figs. 2,
(530-480
lustrated by his masterful
the exterior of cups Douris
drawing
more exuberant
11, 23, 93, 135). Stillness
On
is
always controlled and
style of the
Brygos Painter
(cf.
and serenity are Douris's hallmarks, best
tondo
pictures, as well as
by
his
il-
white-ground
lekythoi. Figures 14, 26, 58, 102, 113. 18, 113.20, 115, 130
Epiktetos
(active
approximately 520-490
B.C.)
Probably a pupil of Psiax, Epiktetos was a bilingual painter trained as a black-figure artist but produced his best early red-figured
cups are often side.
cups and plates, which were
all
name on more than
ATTIC POTTERS AND PAINTERS
in the
tondi
of
his specialty. Exteriors of his
black, thereby focusing attention
Epiktetos signed his
work
who was
on the figured tondi
forty vases.
Figure 27
in-
FlGURl i-. Epiktetos
Komasts (participants male drinking
in a
part)
he inscription
I
.
"Epiktetos painted
me"
at the
begins
lower
left
and runs
in
circular pattern
.1
(accentuating the
rONDO composition to
end
the lower
.it
right.
Red-figured
im
signed b)
\i
i
Epiktetos as painter,
about soo. Diam: i
8.7
cm
A
S
(7
London, bm
in.). i
\y.
i
© BM. Eretria Painter
The his
(active
lush, graceful
approximately
440-410
B.C.)
drawing of the Eretria Painter contrasts with the
style of
contemporary the Kleophon Painter, corresponding more to that of the
slightly
younger Meidias Painter. Though best known for
his
work
oil
cups, the Eretria Painter did his most interesting work on shapes such as the
chous, the squat lekythos, the oon, the amphoriskos, and Because of
its
unique association with women, the epinetron was often deco-
rated with scenes presumably icacy
and grace of the
character of his subject.
wedding
to
meant
painter's
is
in
We see Alkestis relaxing with
The
painter
In figure 28 the del-
harmony with
the intimate
her attendants after her
contempo-
figures are mythological, a
wedding day must have been much
in feeling.
(see figs. 28, 84).
women.
to appeal to
drawing
Admetos. Although these
rary Athenian bride's
pearance and
the epinetron.
is
named
for
both
like this,
in
ap-
an epinetron from Eretria
Figures 28, 84, 112
FlGURl -N. Eretria Painter Alkestis ton the right) after her to
wedding
\dmetos.
Detail of red figured 1
pini
to the
RON
1
I
attributed
retria Painter,
about 4^n. Athens. National
Museum DAI \thens.
neg. no,
\IIH
nm
s
i
16.
POTTERS Wl> PAINTERS
a
Euphronios (active 525-500
An
early
and prominent
B.C.)
Euthymides, Eu-
red-figure Pioneer. In contrast to
phronios preferred carefully arranged compositions of multiple figures on large vases.
On
calyx-KRATER
one of the most famous Attic vases to have survived
now
in
New York — he painted the slain Trojan hero
being transported from the battle by Sleep and Death (see tinctively massive figures to
convey the narrative
in
fig. 3).
—
Sarpedon Using
two-dimensional space,
Euphronios renders the dead hero with exceptional grandeur. Showing
knowledge of and pleasure
in
writing
labeled the epic characters. Later in at
which he was equally
C cup known
Among
(see fig. 16), as well as a
Euphronios's signature 16, 17, 101,
skilled.
his
masterworks
thymides' style
fig.
Type
no). 3,
B.C.)
is
of the major
him
typified
early red-
by three-figure compositions on large vases that
to experiment with
contrast to Euphronios's
known with
Pioneers of
and the teacher of the Kleophrades Painter. Eu-
more grandly conceived
the signature of Euthymides.
545-530
He
often chose subjects
complex poses, such
Figure
as athletes or danc-
tableaus. Seven vases
i
B.C.)
Often called the greatest black-figure
He
the largest
of plastic vases (see
allow for explorations of figural movement in space.
Exekias (active
is
no
figure vase-painting
are
clearly
he turned from painting to potting,
number
With Euphronios, Euthymides was one
ers, in
his
preserved on more than twenty vases. Figures
is
Euthymides (active 525-500
that allowed
Euphronios has
(see pp. 1, 6),
life
dis-
artist,
Exekias was trained in
signed vases both as potter and as painter; as potter he
is
Group
E.
credited with in-
venting the calyx-KRATER, a favorite of red-figure vase-painters because the large area available for decoration
is
well suited for depicting a continuous
narrative frieze. Exekias's mastery of the black-figure technique, particularly
incision,
is
well-known
unequaled.
amphora
and Ajax playing
a
He was
in the
a painter of heroes, as demonstrated by his
Vatican on which he painted a scene of Achilles
board game during a break
in the
was, perhaps, invented by Exekias). In scenes such as tion of
Ajax preparing to commit
sightful
40
this,
War
and
(this
scene
in his depic-
suicide, Exekias shows himself to be an in-
master of psychological tension. Figures
ATTIC POTTERS AND PAINTERS
Trojan
5,
29, 113.25,
120
FlGURl 19. EXEKIAS Achilles
and Ajax playing
a
board game. The nanus
our the numbers on the dice, three their
mouths. A
If this
k
\i
os
insc kii-i
ion
(tria) is
and four
on the
scene was invented b) Exekias, as
for the scene
on
painter, about
jo-520. H: 6i cm
1
Ajax and Vchilles are inscribed, and the)
right,
\\
hie
li
are insc ibed as 1
it
>..ill
issuing From
and Exekias's SIGN \i 10 .is potter) is on the left. believe, it must have been the prototype 1
some scholars
figure 59. Black-figured 5
|
(tes[s]era),
14
amphor in.).
\
1
I
\
Vatican,
pe
signed bj
\
Museo
\
I
I
(
l(
I
xekias
.is
potter and
iregoriano Etrusco
I'll
INKS
\\
I)
1
6757.
I"
\
I
\
I
I
Ks
J
'
Figure 30. Group E Hoplites (foot soldiers)
Note
and
drill
cavalry.
holes at the
shoulder edge of the vase indicating ancient
repairs. Black-figured
neck-AMPHORA attributed to the
Painter of
London
B 174, one of the painters of
%s^um^ Group E
Group E
called
E stands
(the
Exekias springs." This
Group
types of vases, with a preference for rily battles
style
is
JPGM
86.AE.73.
for Exekias) "the soil
from which the
of black-figure painters produced
amphorae. Their images
solid,
(active
many
depict prima-
and episodes from the adventures of gods and heroes. Their
monumental,
figural
and black, with female skin often painted
added white and important Kleitias
E,
(active mid-sixth century B.C.)
Beazley art of
Group
about 540. H: 36.2 cm (14V4 in.). Malibu,
details in
around 570-560
added
in
red. Figure 30
B.C.)
A master of early black-figure painting, Kleitias was a miniaturist whose figures are remarkable for their incised
work
is
the Francois Vase
tomb), which
is
(named
the earliest
and painted
after the
artist of the
Group
of
known Athenian
Polygnotos and
Peloponnesian
War (431-404
447-432 B.C.).
a
B.C.)
The
it
in
an Etruscan
volute-KRATER. Figure 31
B.C.)
contemporary of the Eretria
Painter, the Kleophon Painter worked during the of the Parthenon (constructed
His most elaborate
man who found
Kleophon Painter (active approximately 440S-420S
An
details.
later
phase of the building
and into the
early years of the
Classical style epitomized by the
Parthenon sculptures evidently influenced the Kleophon Painter's treatment of garments
42
and
figural compositions. Like Polygnotos, he decorated large
ATTIC POTTERS AND PAINTERS
Figure The Francois Vase. With multiple
3
i.Kleitias
12.1 inscriptions naming most of the whose wedding is the principal scene depicted, this vase is the Greek vase known. Black-figured volute-KRATER signed by Ergotimos as potter
narrative friezes containing
characters, including Peleus and Thetis,
most heavily inscribed and
Kleitias as painter,
about 570. H: 66
cm
(26
in.).
Florence,
Photo Nimatallah/Art Resource,
New
Museo Archeologico
420s).
York.
FlGl
;-.
ki
Kleophon Painter Departure scene: Warrior holding ceremonial phi
a
u
1
which has been filled w uli u ine from the OINOI HOI held
w
Ins
Red
ifc.
si
wi\os
ti>
the
b)
figured
attributed
Kleophon
Painter, about 1
4
1:
-,.s
cm
[17'/! in.
.
Munich, Staatltche Antikiiis.uninhingen
und 14
\
I
l
[
PAINTERS
4-
vases,
on which he
Kleophon Painter
stamnos
a
is
typically depicted aspects of
named
after a
in St. Petersburg.
kalos inscription (Kleophon
pupil of
life.
The
kalos)
on
Figure 32
Kleophrades Painter (active approximately 500-470
A
Athenian daily
Euthymides and
certainly
vase-painters, the Kleophrades Painter
B.C.)
one of the most talented red-figure
was
a
contemporary of the Berlin
Painter. The word that perhaps best describes the Kleophrades Painter's style
is
"grandeur," what the ancient Greeks called megethos. Also translated
as "largeness of spirit," the
word denotes
a certain seriousness of manner, an
element present already in black-figure painting, notably that of
Lydos and
Exekias. The Kleophrades Painter's most famous picture, on a kalpis, depicts a
number
of separate events that took place during the Sack of Troy.
These events are
illustrated in a single panel that runs continuously
the shoulder of the vase instead of being framed into one or pictorial
format
more
around
panels. This
— which was new — and the monumentality of the
style sug-
gest the possible appearance of lost ancient wall-paintings. In black-figure the Kleophrades Painter
thenaic amphorae,
readily recognizable
by
produced a number of Panahis exclusive use of Pegasos to
Figure 33. Kleophrades Painter Death of Priam. Detail of shoulder of a red-figured hydria (kalpis) attributed to the Kleophrades Painter, about 490. Naples, Museo Nazionale Archeologico H2.422.
44
ATTIC POTTERS AND PAINTERS
decorate Athena's shield. His use of incisions for OUTLINES figure
work
rather than relief lines
Kleopbrades on one of in Paris.
which
his cups,
Figures 33, 77,
1
1
3.
1
is
He
his early training in black-figure.
,
1
1
in
his black-
probably an archaism inherited from is is
named
after the porter signature
now
the Cabinet des Medailles
in
3.4, r.3]
FlGURl ;-4Leagros Group Achilles
Dragging
the Bod) oi
I
lektor
around the walls
of
lro\. Detail of black-
figured in DRLA
attributed to the
Leagros
(
Iroup, aboul
520-500. Boston, mfa, William Francis
Warden Fund,
i
96
;.
63.473. Courtesy, Ml
A,
Boston.
Reproduced with permission. © 1000 mfa, Boston.
All
rights reserved.
Leagros Group (active 520-500 This large and productive
B.C.)
Group
comprises the best of the
century-B.c. black-figure vase-painters and figure
Pioneers. Their drawing
style
and
matter continue the monumental style of
their best efforts illustrate the
Body around
among
may
red-
their favorite subjects,
fig.
34).
liked to
be nonsense rather
and some
Trojan War, such as the Dragging of
the walls of the citadel (see
sixth-
their fondness for epic subject
Lydos and Exekias. They
write inscriptions on their vases, although they
than real words. Battle scenes are
late
contemporary with the
is
The HYDRIA was
1
of
(ektor's their fa-
vorite shape; a typical composition will feature teams of horses exiting or
bounding
named but
the
in
from the
sides of the panel framing the central scene. Bl \/i
Group from kalos INSCRIPTIONS on
stylistically related painters.
FlGURJ
S
five
J4, 59,
\l
l
K
1
1
hydriai by U\c different
76
PO
I
I
1
Ks
\\D PAINTERS
4
s
Figure 35. Master
Little
Black-figured Little-
Master
lip-cup
attributed to the
workshop
of the
Phrynos Painter, about 550. Nonsense inscriptions in the handle zones are intended to mimic actual artists' sig-
natures. H: 15
(5%
in.).
cm
Malibu,
jpgm, Gift of Barbara
and Lawrence
Fleisch-
man, 96. ae. 91.
Figure 36. Little Master
Tondo
of a black-
figured Little-Master
lip-cup signed by
Tleson, and perhaps
painted by the Tleson Painter,
London,
about 540.
bm
b 421.
©BM.
Little
Masters
Descriptive
(active
name
560-530
B.C.)
applied to black-figure miniaturist painters of so-called
Little-Master cups (lip-cups, band-cups,
Droop
cups). (See kylix for the ori-
gin of the term Little Master.) Frequently their subjects were animals, centrally
placed between the handles and/or on the
artist's
Among
the
were the Phrynos Painter and the Tleson Painter, but
others, including the
Figures 35, 36
46
the cup. Often the
signature was an important part of the decoration.
best Little Masters
many
lip of
attic potters and painters
Amasis Painter, worked on Little-Master cups.
Figure
37. Lydos
Theseus Fighting the Minotaur. Detail of black-figured panel-AMi'HORA (Type A) attributed
to
Lydos or a painter close to him, about 550-540. Malibu, JPGM 86.AE.60.
Lydos (active
A
560-540
B.C.)
black-figure painter of great imagination as well as conceptual and techni-
cal ability.
On two
vases he signed as
ho Lydos, the Lydian, indicating
he or his family had immigrated to Athens from Lydia
in
Asia
that
Minor (mod-
ern Turkey). His sturdy figures have a distinctive monumcntality that imparts dignity rather than
mere bulk.
Among
the
new
bly introduced to Athenian vase-painting are Theseus
subjects
1
ydos proba-
and the Minotaur, and
Herakles fighting the triple-bodied Geryon. Lydos preferred to work on large shapes, especially kratf.rs and
AMPHORAE, though
shapes such as cups. Figures 37,
1
1
he also panned smaller
j.5
\IIU
1*0
fTERS ^ND PAINTERS
Lysippides Painter
Named
(active
530-515
B.C.)
by Beazley after a kalos inscription on a neck-AMPHORA
London. He was the painter of many of the black-figured
sides of
now
in
bilingual
amphorae,
for
which the Andokides Painter completed the red-figured
decoration.
The
bilingual format necessitated such a close collaboration that
the
two painters
65,
Makron
(neither of
whom
signed his
have been one person, painting
in fact 72-,
in
name on any
may
of his works)
both techniques. Figures 20-21,
87, 127
(active
approximately 490-475
B.C.)
With Douris, Onesimos, and the Brygos Painter, Makron was one
of the
most important
(530-
480
B.C.).
red-figure cup-painters of the Late Archaic period
He must
painters, for
have been one of the most
more than
six
prolific of all red-figure
hundred vases are attributed
to his hand.
He
seems to have worked exclusively with the potter Hieron, mostly decorating kylikes and skyphoi. in Berlin,
One
of
Makron's most
characteristic
works
is
a kylix
signed by Hieron as potter, depicting the ecstatic worship of
Dionysos: maenads sway and twirl, the folds of their garments following their every
movement;
this ebullient
treatment
is
a hallmark of
Makron's
style.
Figures 38, 58
^3R
^^-^ &F*f
! 1
^P^H
hJJw Mm Figure Worship to
38.
Makron
of Dionysos. Detail of red-figured kylix (Type B) signed by Hieron as potter
Makron
as painter,
about 490. Diam. 33
Kulturbesitz,
cm
(13
Antikensammlung
ATTIC POTTERS AND PAINTERS
in.).
F
(Staatliche
Museen zu
Berlin
2290. Photo Ingrid Geske.
and attributed
— Preuftischer
:
H
FlGURI
J9«
Mannerist I
w
Rs
S PAINTERS
L.
H.
Figure 57. Alabastron Maenad. White-ground alabastron signed by Pasiades as potter and attributed to Painter, about 500. H: 14.6 cm (5V4 in.). London, BM B 668. © bm.
the Pasiades
Glossary of Vase Shapes and Technical Terms
Added colors See color.
Alabastron
(pi.
alabastra)
Bottle for plain or scented oil (perfume).
where
it
was made
shape takes vase
is
its
in glass, faience,
name
originated
small enough to be held in one hand; alternatively,
the shoulder.
known,
Most
Egypt,
in
— the stone from which the
(Gr. dXdpacjTpov, alabaster). This slender, elongated
by a string looped around
text.
The shape
or alabaster
its
it
could be carried
narrow neck or passed through small
lugs on
alabastra have rounded bottoms, but footed examples are
too. Vase-paintings
show women using
Like lekythoi, alabastra were
left
alabastra in a domestic con-
as offerings at tombs.
Figure 57
Alien (or foreign)
A
fragment or section joined to a broken vase
is
said to be alien. In antiquity alien fragments
pair broken vases. See also repairs.
1
The
k.i ki
it
does not actually belong to
were occasionally used to
58. Alien
intrusion of marine motifs into this figural scene indicates that an alien fragmeni (from a k^
painted by
Makron)
roded metal pins are painter, about
has been used to still in
4S0
RJ
pair this cup
m
fig.
102). Malibu.
i
i\
ancient times. In this rare example, the cor
place. Detail of the exterior of a red figured ki
(see also
re-
Figure 58
i
i\
signed bj
[PGM N4.U .569. Photo Penelope
VAS1
SHAPES
WD
l
I
t
ll\u
Douris
as
Potter.
\I
1
I
kms
65
—
Amphora
One
(pi.
amphorae or amphoras) most common Attic shapes. The
of the
ampboreus
Latin,
handles (Gr.
tical
(du.(|>opeus) in
Greek
on both
sides,
d|ic|)i,
—
is
name
ancient
amphora
and
to carry).
c|>ep(o,
Amphorae were
general-purpose containers that could hold liquid (honey, milk, water), dry goods, or small foods (olives). for the ashes of the deceased.
The two
Amphorae
They were used had
often
neck-amphora, whose neck joins the shoulder 59, 90, 124, 138).
piece (figs.
The other form,
amphora or belly-amphora), 20-21, 22,
19,
the format of their pictures.
popular shape,
is
The
wine, or
also as receptacles
is
the
figs.
30,
earlier
sharp angle (see
amphora
(or one-
continuously curved from neck to foot differ also
by their overall color and
black-figured neck-amphora, an especially are reserved,
black-figured and red-figured
and the
pic-
amphorae and
the
neck-amphora are "dark": predominantly black, the pictures on
the black-figured
amphora
are enclosed within windowlike panels, while pic-
on the red-figured forms
tures
is
Neck and body
a "light" vase:
tures are not in panels.
red-figured
The
at a
oil,
but very few survive.
usually simply called
The two forms
29).
lids,
amphora and neck-amphora. The
basic forms are
in
derived from the shape's two ver-
are only sometimes in panels.
There are three principal variations of the amphora, Types A, B, and C.
A
has a flaring mouth, flanged handles with reserved sides usually decorated
with an ivy design, and a foot oldest
and most
(shaped
few examples,
mouth and (see fig.
its
117)
The
two
a
is
fig.
29). B, the
form, has round black handles and an echinus foot
differs
from B by
foot, either a torus or
fig.
19). C, of
which there are
torus (tire-shaped, see
its
an echinus. The Panathenaic
22)
fig.
amphora
famous variant of the neck-amphora. neck-amphora
singular shape of the Nikostbenic
known mainly
in black-figure,
a native Etruscan shape;
was adapted by
many
of these
the potter
amphorae bear
(see fig.
43),
Nikosthenes from his
signature, and
it is
thought that the vases were produced especially for the Etruscan mar-
ket.
The Nolan amphora (named
neck-amphora confined to handles; a tions)
is
for
after
red-figure,
Nola,
is
in
called a doubleen. a stand; in
its
A
du^opiaKog, oil
pi.
small type of
of
two
cylindrical sec-
pointed amphora has a pointed or knob-foot
unpainted form
amphoriskoi)
Italy), a
predominantly black and has ridged
this
commercial transportation of wine and
scented
South
Nolan with double handles (each composed
and requires
is
(perfume). Figures
was the standard container oil.
An amphoriskos
(Gr.
a very small pointed neck-amphora used
for
20-21, 22, 29, 30, 37, 39, 43,
54,
i, 5,
59, 79, 85, 90, 117, 124, 126, 138
66
degrees, or, steps (see
an upside-down shallow bowl; see
like
relatively
common
in
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
19,
mouth/lip
Figuki 59. Amphora Achilles
and Ajax playing
black-figured
a
board game, with Athena standing between them. Diagram
neck-AMPHORA, showing
handles, shoulder, body, foot
Attributed to
(cf. p. 4).
H: 45.3-45.8 cm
the principal parts of an Athenian vase:
1
17
»-] 8
.1
in.).
painter
t
the
1
1
Malibu, [PGM 86.
VASl
tGROS Groi \i
.s
d
t\
.1
pical
mouth, neck, p.
about sio.
1
SHAPES \M> rECHNII
\l
l
I
KMs
67
Animal Style
The use
of animals as the predominant decorative motifs
The term
is
Greece, where the ular.
on painted
pottery.
most often associated with pottery from Corinth and East
The animals
style (based
on orientalizing motifs) was especially pop-
are both real (felines, birds, bulls, boars, goats, deer, dogs,
and hares) and imaginary
(sirens, sphinxes,
and
griffins).
Figures 60, 75
J^\
.U*»L
-
1
J
*
«
J
M
*!
MdW^i ^^B^^^wvMf^B i^^B^^SS^o^H WjMtiW '
*wB&KKtm
^
vV
v
:-; tojr li^w
x
iicrlf
•
^8^{
^isSif
~
/ * wm --^mt
:
.
""
"'
f
|
:
^^m§gjt!^S^f
\^j^j^^ ^^^szz^zj^ -«=--
Friezes decorated in
68
Figure 60. Animal Style Protocorinthian olpe attributed to the Painter of Malibu about 650-625. H (to rim): 30.6 cm (12 in.). Malibu, jpgm 85.AE.89.
Animal
85.AE.89 (name vase),
__—--^^^
Style.
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
Artists' names
Sometimes potters or painters signed mostly they did not. Even those sign
all
who
who
signatures), although
repeatedly signed their works did not
The names invented by
of them.
for painters
their vases (see
Bl \/i
v a\k\
i
many
other scholars
did not sign have various origins, lor example: the A\i \sis
Painter, originally named for (then identified by some with) the potter Axnasis
(who signed some
of the vases he potted); the Bl
where one of
the city of Berlin,
his best vases
Carpenter Painter, named for the subject of for the peculiar, or affected, proportions artist's
name
(pi.
for
Antikensammlung;
the
i.r,
A fleeter, named
a picture; or the
When
his figures.
is
said to be his
an
name
names, see Class and Group.
ARYBALLOl)
cient, but aryballos (Gr. dpi)(3aX\og) this shape, since
it
was applied
The round-bodied aryballos Attic examples of in sculpture
hand, dispensing
show oil
rare. Besides
round
(perfume).
name
Corinth
(see
an-
vases.
and few
71),
fig.
is
only for
lekythoi and other
in antiquity also to
originated in
athletes
The name
known. Representations on vases
(men and boys) holding an aryballos
in
one
onto their skin, or carrying the vase suspended from
aryballoi,
plastic aryballoi (see
oil
could not have been the
this particular type are
the wrist by a string looped
(the
the
and gestures of
Small bottle for plain and, perhaps, scented
and
in
derives from a particular vase, that vase
vase. For other types of
ARYBALLOS
is
named
Paini
ki in
around
its
narrow neck. Footed aryballoi
are
which were wheelmade, there were moldmade
plastic vases); such aryballoi
in
the shape of an owl
goddess Athena's bird) or of three conjoined cockleshells were popular
forms. Figures 61, 71
FlGURl
(•>
1
.
Aryballos t
ORINTH1AN
aryballos ot
.1
hi
s
in.
in
the shape
ram, aboi .
.
I
:
[4 en
Malibu, |pgm
86.AJ .696.
VASl
Ml
MM
s
\\l>
Hi 1IM> M rERMS
69
ASKOS
(pi.
ASKOl)
Small container
named
however, askos
is
askos
is
its
vague resemblance to a wineskin (Gr. daKos);
in all likelihood
a red-figure shape; in
round-bodied vase the topside; in size
for
its
its
— convex top,
not the ancient
most flat
bottom
rarer, relatively taller
— with
though very
likely
oil
of the shape.
form
it is
The
a very low,
mouth and handle on is
tubular.
The small
a vase designed for carefully
(perfume), honey, or vinegar. Al-
used for libations in funerary
had other functions too. Askoi with
a
form the body
and narrow neck suggest that the askos was
pouring liquids such as plain or scented
name
characteristic
molded
probably
rituals, the vase
bodies (see plastic vases) had
zoomorphic shapes such as ducks or lobster claws. Figures 62-63
Figures 62-63. Askos Boar and lion. Red-figured askos,
about 410. H: 6.7 5
(2 /8 in.).
Malibu,
jpgm 83.AE.396.
70
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
cm
Ik,
i
ki
^.4.
ASTRAGALOS Dancing figured
Red-
figures.
.istr.i^.ilos
attributed to the
Soi \di
Painti
s
k.
about soo-450. 1
1:
(4 i.\i
ASTRAGALOS
(pi.
name
m.
i
1
1
1
cm
London,
1.
BM.
804.
ASTRAGALOl)
Rare red-figured vase cient
about
is
in the
unknown, but
shape of a knucklebone (Gr. daTpdyaXog). it
seems sensible that
it
was
Its
called astragalos.
an-
The
Greeks and Romans used sheep knucklebones (the metacarpal or metatarsal bones) as gaming pieces, or dice, and los vase
may
it
has been suggested that the astraga-
Figure 64
originally have been used as a container for them.
Attic/Attica
Of
or related to Attica, the region of which Athens
minology Athenian
is
often used as a
Attribution Ascribing unsigned vases to
synonym
artists.
is
the capital. In vase ter-
for Attic.
See Beazley, artists' names.
Beazley. Sir John D.
Lincoln Professor of Classical Archaeology and Art
in the
University of
Ox-
enormous
ford 1925 -1956, Sir John D. Beazley (1885 -1970) undertook the
task of identifying the individual styles of Attic vase-painters and in so doing established the entire development of Attic vase-painting. Adapting meth-
ods that had been used to distinguish
Renaissance painters, Beazle)
Italian
attributed thousands of mostly unsigned vases on Archaic and Classical
signatures of
or,
anonymous
life's
more
artists
work remains
artists.
He
stylistic
identified the painters either
grounds
from then hundreds
often, by defining the stylistic personalities of
and assigning them names. To
the foundation of
all
modern
a significant
degree, Ins
wise scholarship and a well
spring for the future. See also artists' names.
VASE
s ll
mm
to
s
\\D fECHNICAl
I
1
K
M
Bilingual
Vases are called bilingual
when
they "speak" two languages, that
is,
when
they are painted in two techniques, black-figure on one side and red-figure
on the
other. Their painters are called bilingual artists. See
Andokides
Painter, Lysippides Painter, Oltos, Psiax. Figures 20-21
Figure 65. Black-figure Typical black-figure painting with incised details for
Herakles
and the Triton. Detail of exterior of blackfigured EYE-CUP
(Type A) attributed to
Andokides as potter
and painted
manner
in the
of the
Lysippides Painter,
about 520. Malibu,
jpgm
87.AE.22.
(Cf. figs. 72, 87.)
Black-figure technique
This technique for painting vases, invented in
Corinth around 700
B.C.
and
subsequently adopted by Athenian vase-painters, shows figures in black painted silhouette against the lighter-colored unpainted reserved clay back-
ground or against added white.
To paint
a vase in black-figure technique,
its
surface
was
first
bur-
nished and polished; then an ocher wash might be applied and the surface burnished again.
which were then
A
preliminary sketch outlined the design of the
filled in
figures,
with black gloss; red or white colors were some-
times applied on top of the black. Before firing, incisions were
made
through the black gloss or the colors with a sharp pointed tool
to delin-
eate details of the figures in the lighter color of the underlying clay.
Figures
4, 5, 10, 19, 20, 24, 29, 30, 31, 34, 35, 36, 37, 39, 43, 54, 55, 59, 65, 72,
76, 78, 79, 81, 87, 95, 98, 100, 103, 108, 109, 117, 120, 122, 126, 127, 138
72
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
Bobbin
Vase shaped
like a
yo-yo or
a pulley:
two back-to-back
ring in red-figure
bin
form
had some
was meant
b)
occur
rare,
is
and white-ground. Although neither the ancient name
nor the purpose of this gest that they
connected
disks,
an axlelike cross-piece with a picture on each disk. The shape
is
known,
the subjects depicted on bobbins sug-
erotic or magical purpose.
to be suspended by a cord
It is
probable that a bob-
wound around
the cross-piece or
threaded through the small holes seen on some examples. There
rea-
is little
son to think that bobbins actually were either ordinary yo-yos or toys or bobbins for thread. Figures
66-67
Figuri 66.
Bobbin Zeph) ros and Hyakinrhos. Oik- side of white-ground
bobbin attributed to the Penthesilea
Painter,
about 460-
450. Diam: about 1
1.5
New
em
(4
York,
Fletcher
in.).
8
mm
und,
1
\,
1
wis.
2N.16-. Photo
©
200I
MM
\.
FlGURl 67. Bobbin bobbin,
Profile ot
figure "''. shovi ing
how
the
two halves
are put together.
\
\s|
s|| \|'| s
\
\
I)
fECHNU M
I
I
K
M
s
7*
—
.
Figure 68. boiotian Cabiran-style symposiasts (banqueters).
Kantharos workshop
attributed to the of the
Mystae
Painter,
Once (now lost), Antikensammlung 3286. Drawing by Peggy Sanders, after Cook, Greek Painted late fifth century.
Berlin
Pottery,
fig. 1 3
BOIOTIAN
Of or is
relating to the region of Boiotia, northwest of Athens, of
the capital.
Attic
The pottery workshops
styles, often
which Thebes
of Boiotia were heavily influenced by
copying them, but never competing with them
in quality
or trade. Boiotian clay tends toward a dull brown; the favorite shape was the
kantharos.
A
late black-figure style called
Kabirion, west of Thebes, where
produced from the
phisticated, the decoration
what looks inspiration
like a
much
late fifth into the
Cabiran
(after the
sanctuary at
was
of this pottery has been found)
fourth century B.C.
Though never
on Cabiran pottery can be amusingly
so-
lively
parody of a symposium (male drinking party) suggests
from theater masks and costumes. Figure 68
Burnishing
An
essential step in creating a perfectly
ration for painting.
When
the
smooth surface
of the vase in prepa-
clay was leather-hard but not yet com-
pletely dry, the surface of the vase
was vigorously rubbed with
a hard,
smooth
Figure 69. Burnishing Potter burnishing a vase.
Tondo
of
red-figured kylix attributed to a
follower of Douris,
470-460. Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
—
Preufsischer
Kulturbesitz,
Antikensammlung
F2542. Photo Rosa Mai.
74
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
object,
most
wood, or
likely leather,
smooth
a
and smoothes the surface of the clay and makes face less susceptible to abrasion.
vase surface, a light coating of
when
the
wash had
To
it
shiny;
it
makes
also
the sur-
further enhance the appearance of the
ocher wash could
dried, the vase
compacts
stone. Burnishing
he brushed on the vase;
would be burnished once more before
it
was painted. Figure 69 Cabiran See Boiotian.
Chous See oinochoe, shape
3.
Class Vases of the same shape that are nearly identical or similar potting or form are said to belong to the
work
same
in the details of
may
Class. Classes
include the
named
of several vase-painters and, just like painters, the Classes are
in
names and Group).
various ways (see artists'
Clay
Composed mainly
mixed with water and impurities, clay Neolithic period
aluminum oxide and
of fine particles of
man knew
a soft, malleable substance
raised temperatures.
Two
is
abundant worldwide. As early as the
of the plasticity of clay and
when moist
silicon dioxide
how
it
changed from
to a hard material after exposure to
major groups of clays are distinguished: primary,
FlGURl -O.
Clay Digging or mining
da) (.
m
ORIN
.1
1
pit.
\s PIN \\.
ill
about 600-575.
H: 10.4
cm
Staatliche Berlin
14'
•>
in.).
Museen
zu
-Preufiischcr
Kulturbesitz,
Ajitikensammlung 1
\
s-,.
\m SHAPES \sn iiiiiMt
\i
1
1
k\is
75
Figure 71. Clay Athena with Herakles battling the
Hydra,
with a crab nipping
at
the heel of Herakles. Pale clay typical
of
Corinth, with
inscriptions Corinthian
in the
script.
Aryballos, about 600-575. H: 3 (4 /8 in.).
jpgm
11. 2
Malibu,
92.AE.4.
Figure 72. Clay Symposiasts (banqueters). The distinctive figured eye-cup (Type A) attributed to
Lysippides Painter, about 520. Diam: 36.4
76
warm
reddish tone of Attic clay. Interior of a black-
Andokides as potter and painted
cm
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
(i4 3/x
in.).
in the
manner of
Malibu, jpgm 87.AE.22.
the
(Cf. figs. 65, 87.)
cm
or residual, clays and secondary, or sedimentary, clays. Clays that have
mained
where they were formed are
at the site
clays have been
moved from
re-
called primary. Secondary
the site of their formation by the action of at-
mospheric or water forces, and
composition
their
is
impure, that
they are
is,
mixed with various organic and mineral particles (iron oxide, calcium carbonate, sand, stones, mica, feldspar, and organic marten. Through the process of weathering, the clay particles of secondary clays
therefore
more
ondary clays
will
produce ceramics with similar
become
very fine and
However, not
suitable for the manufacture of pottery.
The proportion
qualities.
the various impurities in the composition of the clay determines
and
plasticity, strength,
are
more
color.
Those properties
in
all sec-
of
porosity,
its
turn determine which clays
and
suitable for the production of sophisticated
richly decorated
vases and which are for coarse cooking and storage ware.
The
clays of Greece vary greatly
color, malleability,
world
—
and firing property. Attic clay
secondary
is
plastic properties
from one place
clay, rich in feldspars, quartz,
and
— one of the and mica.
a characteristic rich orange-red color
to the significant iron oxide content. lent quality, Attic potters
With access
were able to
Corinthian
phisticated shapes.
to another in texture,
greater content of calcium gives
clay it
is
It
finest in the
has excellent
when fired due
to a material of such excel-
craft impressively
complex and
so-
likewise very finely textured, but
a paler tone that tends
Clay that has just been dug from a clay
pit
contains
its
toward yellow.
many
impurities
sand, small pebbles, organic material, etc. These must be removed before the clay can be used for
making
purify the
mixed with
clay,
a large basin.
it is
When
pottery, or the vase will crack during firing. a large quantity of
heavy materials such as stones have
the upper layer with fine particles of clay
the water
is
is
moved
left
To
to settle in
settled to the
bottom,
to an adjacent basin,
where
allowed to evaporate. This process, called levigation, takes time
and
is
The
refined clay
erties.
water and
repeated until the clay has reached the necessary level of refinement. is
then
For coarse ware
required for
making
left
to age, a process that improves
less purification is
fine
its
working prop-
needed, while heavily refined
cla\
is
painted vases. See also wedging. Figures 70, 71, 72
\
\sl
SHAPES AND TECHNICAI
I
I
K
M
s
Figure 73. Clazomenian Clazomenian sarcophagus with friezes of
animals and
battling boplites (foot soldiers), L:
221.5
in.).
480-470.
cm
77.AD.88.
78
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
(87V4
Malibu, jpgm
Clazomenian
An East Greek zomenae on
school of pottery production, centered
the west coast of
modern Turkey. The
production of ceramic sarcophagi decorated the mid-sixth into the early
East Greece.
On
for decoration,
wealth of the
fifth
in
city
in
of Cla-
known
best
is
town
the
for
its
black-figure technique (from
commonly used
century B.C.), which were
in
these sarcophagi the trapezoidal rim provided a Hat surface
whose elaborate character
client.
increased, presumably, with the
The favored motifs were
human
mixture of
a
and
figures
animals; scenes of combat are interspersed with rows of fantastical creatures
rendered
Attic lost)
in a style that
styles.
The clay
suggests influence from both the
is
coarse and deep red;
Wild-Goat and
added colors (now
mostl)
were often thickly applied. Figure 73
Color (polychromy)
The only pigments known
to
Greek potters that could survive the high tem-
peratures in the kilns were white, red, and yellow.
added
colors, for they
were applied
— that
is,
added
They
—
are referred to as
after the black-glossed
Figure 74. Color The
\\
worn amorous pair
reaths
b) this
about to painted ki
i).
kiss are
added
in
Detail of the
ton do
of a red-
figured k>
1
1\
1
\
pe
attributed to the
Carpenter Painter, about 515—510. Malibu, ipgm &5.AE.25.
\
\sl
sil
MM
s
\\
|)
M
t
II
Mi
\
I
I
1
K
Ms
r
III
IIMi
\l
rERMS
Bl
Contour See outline, relief line.
Coral-red
A
paint occasionally applied to
turies B.C. Coral-red this
some Attic pots
in the sixth
was made by adding yellow ocher
and
fifth
cen-
to the black gloss;
made the gloss porous, which caused it to turn deep orange-red, or
"coral-
red" (rather than black) during the reoxidizing phase of firing. Because the coral-red gloss often did not adhere well to the surface of the vase,
its
use never
became widespread, and coral-red was gradually abandoned. Figure 77 Corinthian Pottery from the city of Corinth, in the northern Peloponnese, where the blackfigure technique of vase-painting
was invented
in the
Protocorinthian
pe-
riod (about 720-620). Corinthian vase-painting began in the third quarter of the seventh century B.C.
cuted, particularly in detail (see fig. 60). in the
its
The
It is
characterized by animal-style vases exe-
early phases, with careful attention to technique
and
precision typical of the Protocorinthian phase yields
Corinthian period to a preference for larger figures, often quickly
scribed and painted in increasingly larger fields, which in
many
in-
cases leaves
the entire vase available for decoration with a single figure, animal, or motif (see fig. 71). Evidently as a result of increased trade
brid creatures
of Animals) joined the collection of
Protocorinthian part,
and the
of dilute
with the East, exotic hy-
and monsters (Gorgoneion, Typhon, Triton, Boread, Mistress
style.
more natural animals
Corinthian clay
is
much
paler than
typical effect of Corinthian vase-painting
is
inherited its
Attic counter-
achieved by the use
gloss and abundant polychromy. Figures 71, 75
Cup See kylix.
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
from the
FlGUR] --. Coral-red
The Deeds painted
of Herakles, with Athena seated in coral-red.
about 480-470.
in
the middle.
The
entire bod) o( tins \.m- has been
Red-figured volute krater attributed to the
H (to rim): 49.7-50.6 cm (19
\
•
\s|
19
1
sll
in.).
\
V\
Kleophrades Painter,
Malibu, JPGM 84.AJ "-4.
s
\\
|)
I
I
1
HSU
\
I
I
IK M
s
Bj
Figure 78. Defects/ flaws Judge
in athletic
contest.
vase
is
Although
this
generally
a masterful
demonstration of black-figure
technique, mistakes in the application of
the
gloss may have
caused the mottled surface visible on this figure. Detail of a
Panathenaic prize
amphora
attributed
to the Painter of the
Wedding Procession and signed by the potter
Nikodemos,
363/362
B.C.
Malibu,
jpgm 93.AE.55. (Cf.
fig.
117.)
Figure 79. Defects/ flaws The light spot in
the
center of the panel is
a dented
and
misfired area that
was
probably caused by this vase accidentally
touching another vase inside the kiln. Detail of black-figured
amphora
(Type B)
attributed to the
Rycroft Painter, about
520-510. Malibu,
JPGM
84
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
86.AE.65.
Defects/ flaws
The imperfections
in the
ceramic body or the GLOSS that occasionally occur
during manufacture of a vase. Sometimes the gloss may have been diluted too
much,
resulting in a reddish rather than black color after
peratures in the KILN spots
When
may
may produce
similar changes.
I
[RING; uneven tem-
Red or brown areas and
likewise be the result of too low or too high firing temperatures.
vases that had not yet reached the
LEATHER-HARD
stage
bumped
to-
gether, this often caused dents or deformations in their shape. Cracks might
occur at any time during the manufacture of in the
clay
itself
or because of air bubbles
in
a vase either
because of
the clay. Variations
a fault
the thick-
in
ness of different sections of a vase might lead to cracking as well, due to differential all
expansion and contraction during drying,
cause stress in the vase. Foreign particles
in
firing,
the clay
small chips that separate from the surface of the vase
those particles during
firing.
or cooling, which
may cause
spalls
— due to expansion of
Figures 78, 79
Dilute gloss
The same black
gloss as that used for the entire decoration of the vase, but di-
luted with water.
brown color
The
resulting
medium
fires to a
translucent
brown
or golden
that appears to be applied with a very thin brush. Dilute gloss
used for rendering fine details and
is
is
especially effective for the delineation of
anatomical features of figures, hair, or
fine
garments. Figures 50, 66, 80,
1
o
1
FlGUR] So. Dilute gloss
The
hair of this
woman w
painted
is
uli dilute .uloss.
Fragment
of the
interior of
figured In
Dot
red
.1
i'u
1
ris
\
1
.is
1
signed painter,
about 490
Malibu, [PGM Si.ae.zi
Maya
\
\sl
Ml
MM
s
\\l>
I
;.
Photo
Iston.
IIUIMi M fERMS
S
;
in
for the
red-figure,
arc reserved areas against the
painted black-gloss background (see red-] IGURJ
11
Timiades Painter, Boston, mfa, Henry Lillie Pierce Fund, 98.916. Courtesy, mfa, Boston. Reproduced with permission. © 2001 mfa, Boston. All rights reserved.
Amazon queen Andromache. about 560. H: 39.4 cm 1 5 in.).
Herakles fighting the
(
vase shapes and technical terms
Tyrrhenian amphora Distinctively ovoid-shaped black-figured Attic;
around 570-550 b.c, apparently Italy,
a
where nearly
market already
of
in
tune with
Corinthian
style; their unstinting
come from
decorative animal friezes
masts (dancers) and the adventures of Herakles are subjects
on Tyrrhenian
Central
in
them have been found. The vases were fashioned
all
added colors and
neck-AMPHORA, produced
especially for export to Etruria
vases.
The
artists to
for
use of
that tradition. Ko-
among
the
most popular
whom these amphorae
(and a few
examples of other shapes) are attributed are known as the Tyrrhenian
Group. Figure 138
Wedging or kneading
make
Cutting, beating, and working the clay in order to
neous; even consistency
is
essential to successful
antiquity these operations were executed by
machine). Wedging, the
moves
air
first
it
more homoge-
construction
of a vase. In
hand (today they are done
by-
step in the process of constructing a vase, re-
bubbles, thereby improving the working properties of the clay.
When wedging
is
completed, the clay
is
ready to be
thrown.
White-ground
A
clay applied
slip of fine white
to the surface of a vase before painting the
image or design. The white then formed the background
was
either painted in black-figure technique,
polychromy. This technique
which
for the image,
outlined, or outlined with
— called white-ground — was used
lekythoi and on some kylikes and kraters. Figures
mainly on
18, 49, 50, 56, 57,
66, 128
Wild-Goat Style
The Wild-Goat tic
Style,
made
of pottery
in
produced approximately 650-550
East Greece,
and Rhodes. The name
is
B.C.,
is
characteris-
especially at the sites of Chios, Miletos,
derived from
its
principal decoration: friezes of
goats (and sometimes other animals, such as deer) that circumnavigate the
pot
in a lazy
of motifs
is
procession of grazing poses (see
used for
painting style
is
the local clay.
filling,
animal
most derived from ORI1
typified by dark patterning applied
Figure
i
N
styi 1
\i
1
|.
A
ide
\\
ariet)
\
[ZING sources.
on the pale
si jp
I
he
covering
39
VASl
SHAPES \M> fECHNK
\l
I
I
K
M
S
I4 l »
Friezes of grazing wild goats
Figure 139. Wild-Goat Style from an orientalizing workshop of East Greece. Oinochoe,
probably from Miletos, about
150
62.5.
H: 35.7
VASE SHAPES AND TECHNICAL TERMS
cm
(14
in.).
Malibu, jpgm 81.AE.83.
Figure 140. Potter's workshop Athena crowns the
staff of a potter's
workshop. Shoulder of red-figured iiydria
the Leningrad Painter, about
490-480. Vicenza, Banca
(kalpis) attributed to
Intesa Collection c 278.
Workshop Term
referring both to the
stylistically related
Groups
working space where vases were made and of potters
and painters
(for
example, the work-
shop of the Penthesilea Painter). The workshops and the
to
owners were
their
economic foundations of ceramic production. Whereas painters seem
to
have moved from one workshop to another, potters (and potter-pa inters)
were
stable,
determining production, workforce, and clientele
(see especially
Amasis, Exekias, Euphronios, Nikosthenes, and Sotades)
most
likely a family-run business.
were employed
From
workshop, engaged
in a
WEDGING, THROWING
in
four to a dozen
digging au^\ purii
the vases on the POl
Willi
["ER'S
1,
what was
in
skilled , >
persons
ING the
i
r \i>i
m \kkv
IHIIMl M
I
1
KM
«Ii« t
fo
2>
/
^v
Select Bibliography
Amyx, D. Arias,
A. Corinthian Vase-Painting of the Archaic Period. Berkeley, [988.
and M. Hirmer. A History of a Thousand
P. E.,
by
rev.
Beazley,
D. The Development
J.
mer and M.
B.
Moore,
Attic Black-figure
/
Ir.ms.
and
Dev.). 1951. Rev. edn., D. von Both-
(
eds. Berkeley, 1986.
= ABV).
[956. Reprint, New York, [97.8. = ARV 1 1963. Reprint, New York, ABV and ARV 1 = Para.). Oxford, 1971.
.
Attic Black-figure Vase-painters Attic Red-figure Vase-painters.
.
Paralipomena: Additions to J.
Greek Vase Painting.
Years of
York, [962.
.
Boardman,
(
2nd edn.
).
(
1984.
(
Athenian Black Figure Vases.
New
York, 1974.
New York, 1975. Period. New York, 1989.
Athenian Red Figure Vases: The Archaic Period.
.
Athenian Red Figure Vases: The Classical
.
Buys,
New
B. Shefton.
.
Early Greek Vase Painting: Eleventh-Sixth Centuries
.
The History of Greek
S.,
and
V.
Vases: Potters, Painters
and
B.
ETD Pyxis Type
A
/
(
Alabastron
Askos
Kalpis
Squat Lekythos Hydria
Shoulder
Lekythos
Pelike
Nolan
Amphora Type A
Amphora
r Panathenaic Amphora
Amphora Type B
Amphora Type C
Loutrophoros
Index
Note: Page numbers followed by the
letter f
EPINETRON, 39, 88, 88f
Eretria Painter, 39,
indicate figures.
Euphronios,
n7 Achilles Painter,
91,
31, 321, 46, 69,
i2if, 1331,
AMPHORA,
xf, I of, 14, 32f, 3 3 f , 34f, 4 if,
Andokides Painter,
44
40, 4if, 42, 105, I23f,
EYES (EYE-CUPS), 90-91, 9lf, 107-108
31, 331, 48, 721, 76f,
Geometric period,
94f, 95, 116,
120
Geras Painter, 25f
68, 68f, 82
NAMES
gloss/glaze, 85, 851, 96, 124
OF, 4, 69, 71, 143
ARYBALLOS, 69,
691, 76f
HYDRIA, Beazley, Sir John D.,
Berlin Painter, 31,
4, 42, 56,
2lf,
331",
5lf,
98-99
71
341, 35, 69, i37f
BILINGUAL ARTISTS /VASES,
Brygos Painter,
3 I, 3 3 f ,
72
6f, zzi, 35, 351, 971,
KANTHAROS,
29f, 32f, 92f, 97f, IOI, II7f
Kerameikos,
2,
IOI
KILN, 91-93, IO3, I03f
Kleitias, 31, 42, 43f
I22f, I42f
Kleophon
C
xf, I, 40,
5, 8, iof,
FUNCTION, SHAPE AND, 2
138
ANIMAL STYLE, ARTISTS,
Exekias,
89^ 94^ 124-127,
i26f, i32f, i48f, 149
9
nof
I29f, 143
42f, 43f, 66, 67f,
if,
39f, 88f,
a8f, 29f, 40, 54, i07f,
f
EUTHYMIDES,
ii, 3 of, 31, 56
Amasis Painter, 7-8,
1, 7f,
Painter, 36, 42-43, 43f
Kleophrades Painter,
Painter, 36, 36f, 60
Carpenter Painter, 141-1 5f,
69, 79f
83^
40,
44-45, 44^
i2if, i39f
clay, 75-77, 75f, 76f
kneading, 149
color,
krater, 43f, 53^ 55f, 571, 6of, 83f, 104-
3,
79-80,
79f, 8of
conservation, 23-29
Corinthian,
105, 104^ 105^ 106, 134
691, 751", 76f, 8of, 82, io^t
kylix,
6f, iof,
14-15^
i8f, 27f, 28f, 38f,
46f, 48f, 54f, 56f, 58f, 76f,
107^
dinos, 36, 86f, 87
Dinos Painter,
36,
37^ 59
dipinto, 87, 87^ 96
Leagros Group,
Douris, 8-1
LEKYTHOS,
1,
io8f, i22f,
271, 38, 381,
65^
123^ 125^ i38f
74f, 85f,
Lydos,
8,
8,
I3f, 3of,
45, 451, 671, 8if
II2-II3, II3f
47, 47f, i2if
Lysippides Painter, 7 6f, 9if,
156
106-109,
io8f, i09f
1351
8,
31, 331, 48, 721,
Makron,
48, 48f, 65f
MEANDER,
I
I
6,
Kl
M
sll
MM
ISM, 8
22f
I
Meidias Painter,
ii,
3 f,
i
50,
5
1,
1
11U,
I
,
I
S()| \l)l S,
I24f
MINIATURISM, 7-8
S01 \di
MYTHS, I2-I6
si
4, 69, 7
I
I
,
Ml,
II
6
J7f, 4
Kl
,
\M),
l()\
I
J,
29l
r, 6zf, jf,
1