AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED COLUMN-KRATER
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED COLUMN-KRATER
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED COLUMN-KRATER
2 More
PROPERTY OF STANLEY MOSS, NEW YORK
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED COLUMN-KRATER

ATTRIBUTED TO THE RYCROFT PAINTER, CIRCA 510 B.C.

Details
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED COLUMN-KRATER
ATTRIBUTED TO THE RYCROFT PAINTER, CIRCA 510 B.C.
15 ¼ in. (38.7 cm.) high
Provenance
with Herbert A. Cahn, Basel, 1972 (checklist for Basel Fair, 9-19 March 1972, stand 29).
Antiquities, Sotheby’s, London, 9 December 1974, lot 279.
with Herbert A. Cahn, Basel.
Acquired by the current owner from the above, circa 1980s.
Literature
W.G. Moon, "Some New and Little-Known Vases by the Rycroft and Priam Painters," Greek Vases in The J. Paul Getty Museum 2, 1985, pp. 42-44, figs. 3a-b.
Beazley Archive Pottery Database no. 3477.

Brought to you by

Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

As W.G. Moon informs (op. cit., p. 41), the Rycroft Painter, along with his contemporary the Priam Painter, represents the last generation of Athenian vase-painters working in black-figure. The artist kept “black-figure competitive and flexible, in its eleventh hour, to changing markets and tastes” and his “refined graphic sense” is aware of the spatial advantages and increasing naturalism of the burgeoning red-figured technique.
Depicted on one side of this krater is a goddess, perhaps Artemis, driving a quadriga with Apollo standing behind, playing his kithara. The other side depicts Dionysos between two dancing maenads, wearing long chitons and panther skins. Circling the rim are a variety of animals, including boars and lions. Chariot scenes were a favorite subject of the Rycroft Painter. For a similar example, see Beazley Archive Pottery Database no. 237.

More from Antiquities

View All
View All