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ATTRIBUTED TO THE IGNAZIA GROUP CIRCLE OF THE DARIUS PAINTER CIRCA 340-320 B.C.
Details
AN APULIAN RED-FIGURE PELIKE
attributed to the ignazia group
circle of the darius painter
circa 340-320 b.c.
The A-side with a woman in three-quarter view seated on a folding stool, looking towards a winged Eros flying in from the left, a fillet in his hands, a maid to the right holding a parasol over the head of her mistress, the neck with bands of rosettes, dotted egg, and dots; the B-side with a woman seated on a hollow rock holding a cista, a woman to the left with a tambourine and a mirror, the neck with a band of laurel above dotted egg, with palmette complexes below the handles, a band of wave below the scenes
12 in. (31.7 cm.) high
attributed to the ignazia group
circle of the darius painter
circa 340-320 b.c.
The A-side with a woman in three-quarter view seated on a folding stool, looking towards a winged Eros flying in from the left, a fillet in his hands, a maid to the right holding a parasol over the head of her mistress, the neck with bands of rosettes, dotted egg, and dots; the B-side with a woman seated on a hollow rock holding a cista, a woman to the left with a tambourine and a mirror, the neck with a band of laurel above dotted egg, with palmette complexes below the handles, a band of wave below the scenes
12 in. (31.7 cm.) high
Provenance
Royal Athena Gallery
Literature
Trendall and Cambitoglou, Second Supplement to the Red-figured Vases of Apulia, Part I, no. 18/147d.