AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED LEKYTHOS
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED LEKYTHOS
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED LEKYTHOS
1 More
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED LEKYTHOS
4 More
THE PROPERTY OF A MIDWEST PRIVATE COLLECTOR
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED LEKYTHOS

ATTRIBUTED TO PASEAS, SIGNED BY THE POTTER PHEIDIADES, CIRCA 520 B.C.

Details
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED LEKYTHOS
ATTRIBUTED TO PASEAS, SIGNED BY THE POTTER PHEIDIADES, CIRCA 520 B.C.
6 in. (15.2 cm.) high
Provenance
Dr. Volker Gross (1912-1993), Bad Nauheim, Germany.
A Private Collection of Greek Vases and Terracottas, Christie's, London, 5 July 1996, lot 65.
Private Collection, Rhode Island, acquired from the above.
Property of a New England Private Collector; Antiquities, Christie’s, New York, 17 October 2023, lot 31.
Literature
M. Iozzo, "9 Plates by Paseas," in J.H. Oakley, ed., Athenian Potters and Painters, vol. III, Oxford and Philadelphia, 2014, pp. 87-90, figs. 20-21, n. 79.
Beazley Archive Pottery Database no. 20376.

Brought to you by

Hannah Solomon
Hannah Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

Pasaes was an accomplished painter of the late Archaic period who worked in both black and red figure. His name is known from a signature on a fragmentary black-figured plaque found on the Acropolis in Athens. Today he is best known as a specialist of red-figured plates, where, together with his contemporary Epiktetos, he created high quality works that display exceptional compositional balance and style (see p. 82 in M. Iozzo, op. cit.). In addition to plates and plaques, he also painted a few cups (kylikes and kantharoi), an alabastron and several lekythoi.

The form of the lekythos presented here and the placement of some of its floral ornament is quite unusual – note the molding below the echinus mouth, the circular shape of the handle, and the shoulder palmettes that extend up the neck. The body of the vessel has three revelers evenly spaced, on a net-pattern groundline. The central figure holds a barbiton and a plektron. There are traces of inscriptions in the field, palmettes and tendrils below the handle, a band of tongues high on the neck, and the potter’s signature on the vessel rim, "Pheidiades Epoiesen." Pheidiades’ name is also known from kalos inscriptions on two vases by Smikros (p. 90 in Iozzo, op. cit.).

More from Antiquities

View All
View All