AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED EYE-CUP (TYPE A)
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED EYE-CUP (TYPE A)
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED EYE-CUP (TYPE A)
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED EYE-CUP (TYPE A)
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PROPERTY OF AN AMERICAN PRIVATE COLLECTOR
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED EYE-CUP (TYPE A)

CIRCA 520-510 B.C.

Details
AN ATTIC BLACK-FIGURED EYE-CUP (TYPE A)
CIRCA 520-510 B.C.
7 ½ in. (19 cm.) diameter, excluding handles
Provenance
Private Collection, U.S.
Property from a Midwestern Private Collection; Antiquities, Sotheby’s, New York, 14 June 2000, lot 57.

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Hannah Fox Solomon
Hannah Fox Solomon Head of Department, Specialist

Lot Essay

On each side of the exterior of this cup is a pair of warriors in combat between eyes. Each wears a corselet over a tunic, with a spear and Corinthian helmet, with the warrior to the right in a high-crested variant.

Eye-cups were popular during the Archaic period in both black- and red-figure and frequently depict multiple figures between the eyes and other figures flanking and/or beneath the handles, as here. For a related Type A cup, also unattributed, see the example in The Metropolitan Museum of Art, no. 39 in G.M.A. Richter, Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, fasc. 2, Attic Black-figured Kylikes.

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