Red-Figure Kylix (Drinking Cup) Fragment
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Manner of
Antiphon Painter
Greek (active ca. 500 BCE - ca. 475 BCE) Primary
Red-Figure Kylix (Drinking Cup) Fragment
Around 490 BCE
Clay
3 15/16 x 3 1/8 x 3/8 in. (10 x 7.9 x 1 cm)
Bryn Mawr College
Accession Number:
P.194
Geography:
Europe
Classification:
Containers and Vessels; Vessels; Kylikes
Keywords
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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."
- cups - Open bowl-shaped vessels, used chiefly for drinking, often having one handle, but sometimes two handles or none, generally on a low foot-ring; also includes similar bowl-shaped vessels, generally without handles, resting on a stem and supported by a spreading foot. Occasionally made with a lid.
- kylikes - Ancient Greek drinking vessels in the form of a broad, shallow bowl set on a high foot or pedestal with two upcurving handles.
- Red-figure - Refers to a style of Greek vase painting that developed from the Black-figure style. It appeared in Athens around 530 BCE and spread to other areas of Greece, southern Italy, Etruria, and elsewhere in the Mediterranean area, until it disappeared in the third century BCE. The style is characterized by a particular technique, which involves the use of refined slip and a two-phase firing process to create a black ground through sintering, with figures reserved in red. The details of the figures are more fluid than in the Black-figure style, and are typically drawn with a brush, using both a defined, black relief line and a more dilute line that varies in color from dark gold to black.
- sherds - Limited to fragments of pottery or glass.
- 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
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Owner Name: Dr. Caroline Ransom, Associate Professor of History of Art and Classical Archaeology from 1905-1911
Role: Donor
Place: Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, USA
Acquisition Method: Purchased from Dr. Ludwig Pollak
Disposal Method: Donated to Bryn Mawr College
Ownership Start Date: 1905-1911
Ownership End Date: 1905-1911
Remarks: There were no records for the donations from Dr. Ransom. In 1971 authors Kyle Phillips Jr. and Ann Ashmead determined that the pieces with P inked on them and sometimes R pencilled on them were for "Pollak" and "Ransom". See the preface in this publication for this notation: https://www.cvaonline.org/XDB/ASP/browseCVAtext.asp
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Owner Name: Dr. Ludwig Pollak
Role: Seller
Place: Rome, Italy
Acquisition Method: unknown
Disposal Method: Sold to Caroline Ransom
Ownership Start Date: unknown
Ownership End Date: 1905-1911
Remarks: There were no records for the donations from Dr. Ransom. In 1971 authors Kyle Phillips Jr. and Ann Ashmead determined that the pieces with P inked on them and sometimes R pencilled on them were for "Pollak" and "Ransom". See the preface in this publication for this notation: https://www.cvaonline.org/XDB/ASP/browseCVAtext.asp
Bibliography List
The following Bibliography exist for this object:
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Ann Harnwell Ashmead
and Kyle M. Phillips.
Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, United States, Fascicule 13.
Princeton University Press.
Princeton, NJ, 1971
Page Number: 13-14, Figure Number: Plate 9, 4-5 - Mary Hamilton Swindler, "The Bryn Mawr Collection of Greek Vases," American Journal of Archaeology 20, no. 3 (1916): 308.
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