A CORINTHIAN BLACK-FIGURED BROAD-BOTTOMED OINOCHOE
A CORINTHIAN BLACK-FIGURED BROAD-BOTTOMED OINOCHOE
A CORINTHIAN BLACK-FIGURED BROAD-BOTTOMED OINOCHOE
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PROPERTY FROM A NEW YORK PRIVATE COLLECTION
A CORINTHIAN BLACK-FIGURED BROAD-BOTTOMED OINOCHOE

ATTRIBUTED TO THE PAINTER OF VATICAN 73, CIRCA 640-630 B.C.

Details
A CORINTHIAN BLACK-FIGURED BROAD-BOTTOMED OINOCHOE
ATTRIBUTED TO THE PAINTER OF VATICAN 73, CIRCA 640-630 B.C.
9 ¾ in. (24.7 cm.) high
Provenance
Antiquities, Sotheby's, London, 26 November 1968, lot 106.
Kunstwerke der Antike, Auktion 40, Münzen und Medaillen, Basel, 13 December 1969, lot 31.
with Galerie G. Maspero, Paris.
Private Collection, France, 1970.
Art Market, Switzerland.
Antiquities, Christie's, New York, 5 June 2014, lot 72.
Art Market, U.K., acquired from the above.
with Phoenix Ancient Art, New York and Geneva.
Acquired by the current owner from the above, 2015.
Literature
D.A. Amyx, Corinthian Vase-Painting of the Archaic Period, vol. I, Berkeley, 1988, p. 68, no. 17.
C.W. Neeft, "What is in a Name? The Painter of Vatican 73 in the Getty," Greek Vases in the J. Paul Getty Museum, vol. 6, 2000, p. 31, no. 66.

Brought to you by

Hannah Solomon
Hannah Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

The body of this large oinochoe is decorated with a band of animals and monsters, centered at the front by a siren flanked by seated sphinxes, including three lions, two panthers, a goat, a stag, and a bull, with rosettes in the field. There is a band of rays encircling the base and a triple band of dots above the main frieze. Black and yellow tongues descend from the neck, with dot rosettes above, below, and on the mouth, with details rendered in added white, red and yellow.

The Painter of Vatican 73, named after an olpe in the Vatican Museums, is considered one of the finest Corinthian vase-painters. According to C.W. Neeft (op. cit, p. 30), the artist overcame the “initial clumsiness of black-figure drawing” and “a subtle balance has been reached between animals and filling ornaments, between silhouette and details, between black and added red. These characteristics combine to yield a confident, clean, graceful style that can at once be grasped and appreciated.” For a similar example by the artist, see the oinochoe in the Toledo Museum of Art (inv. no. 1963.23A-B, no. 13 in D.A. Amyx, op. cit.).

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