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Published byAdam Hudson Modified over 9 years ago
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Greek Vase Painting
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Vase Shapes hydra used for water “bell” krater used for mixing amphora used for wine
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Vase Shapes (cont.) lekythos used for oil kylix used for drinking wine at a symposiumsymposium Click hereClick here for more on Greek vase shapes.
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Geometric Krater by the Dipylon Master from the Dipylon Cemetery, Athens, GR ca. 740 BCE 3’ 4 1/2” high The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYDipylon Master 1
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Françoise Vase (Attic black-figure volute krater) Kletias and Ergotimos from Chiusi, Italy ca. 570 BCE approx. 2’ 2” high Museo Archeologica, Florence, IT 2
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Achilles and Ajax playing a dice game (detail from black-figure amphora) from Vulci, Italy Exekias ca. 540 - 530 BCE whole vessel approx. 2’ high Vatican Museums, Rome, IT black-figure Exekias 3
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Signature of Exekias black on red Louvre, Paris, FR 4
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Achilles and Ajax playing a dice game (Attic bilingual amphora) from Orvietto, Italy Andokides Painter ca. 525 - 520 BCE black-figure side (left) red-figure side (right) approx. 1’ 9” high Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Andokides Painter 5
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Oedipus and the Sphinx Achilles Painter ca. 440 - 430 BCE red-figure amphora Staatliche Antikensammlugen, Munich, Germany Achilles Painter 6
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Web Resources Wikipedia's entry on Ancient Greek PotteryAncient Greek Pottery The Beazley Archive: Classical Art Research Centre [Note: Beazley is known as the first significant scholar of Greek pottery after Wincklemann.] The Beazley Archive The Metropolitan Museum of Art's web page on Athenian pottery – both black- and red-figure pottery is discussed.web page
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