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Attic Black-Figure Lekythos (Oil Bottle)

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Image of Attic Black-Figure Lekythos (Oil Bottle)

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Bookmark: http://triarte.brynmawr.edu/objects-1/info/157338



Attributed to workshop of
Beldam Painter
Ancient Greek (active ca. 500 BCE - ca. 450 BCE) Primary



Attic Black-Figure Lekythos (Oil Bottle)

Late Archaic
ca. 490 BCE
Clay

6 1/16 x 2 5/16 x 2 5/16 in. (15.4 x 5.9 x 5.9 cm)

Bryn Mawr College
Accession Number: P.3183
Geography: Europe, Greece
Classification: Containers and Vessels; Vessels; Lekythoi
Culture/Nationality: Greek/Attic
Collection: Robinson Collection

Keywords Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
This object has the following keywords:
  • Attic - Style and culture of the region of Attica. For culture particular to the capital of Attica, Athens, use "Athenian."
  • Black-figure - Refers to a style of Greek vase painting that developed from the Geometric and Orientalizing styles. It appeared in Corinth around 720 BCE, flourished in Attica by 600 BCE, and was found in Sparta, eastern Greece, and elsewhere, until the Red-figure style gradually replaced it in the late sixth century BCE. The style is characterized by a particular technique, which is characterized by the use of a refined slip, a two-stage firing process, and sintering to create black figures in silhouette on a red ground. Details were incised into the black figures or applied in purple or white pigment.
  • lekythoi - Ancient Greek one-handled, usually tall and slender narrow-necked vessels used for oil and unguents and as an offering for the dead. The form resembles the aryballos in that it has a narrow neck and a single handle, but the lekythos is generally a taller vessel with a small, deep mouth. The Greek word lekythos was undoubtedly used for the various forms called "lekythos" today, although it also appears that the term was used for oil vessels in general in Ancient times.
  • palmette - Motif resembling a stylized erect leaf divided into lobes, in the form of a fan or palm leaf, often supported by spirals. Its origins are obscure, but similar motifs are first recorded in Syria and Mesopotamia and in the islands of the eastern Mediterranean by the 2nd millennium BCE. As the name suggests, it may have been derived from representations of palm-trees, especially in view of the belief that a tree cult may have existed in western Asia in association with the introduction of the cultivated date-palm; however, it has much in common with other early floral and spiral motifs. The motif is common in classical and classicizing styles, used either individually or along with other conventionalized flower or foliage forms, for example, in an anthemion.
  • vase paintings - Refers to two-dimensional decoration applied to pottery by using paint made of metallic oxides or other pigments held in suspension in slip or another medium. The term is particularly used to refer to Ancient Greek red- and black-figure works. See also "porcelain paintings (visual works)."

Additional Images Click an image to view a larger version
Additional Image P.3183_BMC_b.jpg
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Additional Image P.3183_BMC_f.jpg
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Additional Image P.3183_BMC_pr.jpg
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Additional Image P.3183_BMC_r.jpg
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Additional Image P.3183_BMC_t.jpg
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Additional Image P.3183_BMC_pl.jpg
P.3183_BMC_pl.jpg

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<ref name=BMC>cite web |url=http://triarte.brynmawr.edu/objects-1/info/157338 |title=Attic Black-Figure Lekythos (Oil Bottle) |author=Bryn Mawr College Library Special Collections |accessdate=3/23/2023 |publisher=Bryn Mawr College</ref>

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