
Cleveland Museum of Art
Gravestone in the Form of a Lekythos
- Date
- 300s BCE
- Medium
- marble
- Culture
- Greece, Athens
- Department
- Greek and Roman Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
This grave marker takes the form of a lekythos, a type of vase (usually ceramic) commonly left as a grave offering in ancient Athens. Now fragmentary, it once had a foot below and a thin neck and vertical handle above. Five sculpted figures adorn its front. At left, an unnamed woman holds an infant. To their right, a woman, Lysistrate, clasps hands with a bearded man, Timophon. Between them stands a young girl, likely Kleippe, although her name is partially lost. The scene may commemorate Lysistrate’s death in childbirth, mourned by her husband and older child. Her newborn child apparently survived. Inscriptions identify three of the four standing figures sculpted in relief.
The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
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