Red-Figure Squat Lekythos (Oil Bottle) with Eros
Classical430 BCE - Early 4th century BCE
Clay
6 x 3 7/16 x 3 7/16 in. (15.2 x 8.7 x 8.7 cm)
Bryn Mawr College
Accession Number:
2011.17.5
Geography:
Europe, Greece, Possibly Attica
Classification:
Containers and Vessels; Vessels; Lekythoi
Collection:
Collection of Doreen Canaday Spitzer
Keywords
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This object has the following keywords:
- 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.
- 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.
- squat lekythoi - A form of broad-footed lekythoi common in red-figure painting, featuring a broad body and curving shoulders, lacking the sharp shoulder of the cylindrical type. It begins to be made late in the fifth century BCE.
- 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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Exhibition List
This object was included in the following exhibitions:
- Ancient Life on Greek Pottery Bryn Mawr College , Mar 30, 2015 – Jun 1, 2015
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