AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED HYDRIA
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED HYDRIA
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PROPERTY OF A JAPANESE PRIVATE COLLECTOR
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED HYDRIA

ATTRIBUTED TO THE GROUP OF POLYGNOTOS, CIRCA 440-420 B.C.

Details
AN ATTIC RED-FIGURED HYDRIA
ATTRIBUTED TO THE GROUP OF POLYGNOTOS, CIRCA 440-420 B.C.
11 ¾ in. (29.8 cm.) high
Provenance
Private Collection, Japan, acquired 1960s-1970s (accompanied by a custom-made wood box inscribed by Ichikawa Kiyoshi (1896-1987)).
Acquired by the current owner from the above, 2024.

Brought to you by

Hannah Solomon
Hannah Solomon Vice President, International Head of Department

Lot Essay

The scene presented here is centered by a woman working wool. She is seated on a klismos, in profile to the right, pulling out a skein of wool from her kalathos (basket). She works it into thinner yard with her fingers and feeds it into a second kalathos. She is flanked by two draped women, the one to the left holds a mirror in her hand and to the right ties a cord around her chiton beneath her breasts. To keep the kolpos (overfold) out of the way, she holds the garment in her teeth. A fillet hangs in the field above. For a similar scene of a woman working wool on a hydria by the Clio Painter at the British Museum (inv. no. E215), see Beazley Archive Pottery Database no. 214529.

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