
Cleveland Museum of Art
Kottabos Element of a Dancing Satyr
- Date
- 470–450 BCE
- Medium
- bronze
- Culture
- Etruscan
- Department
- Greek and Roman Art
- Institution
- Cleveland Museum of Art
This diminutive dancing satyr, identifiable by his snub nose and equine ears (though without a tail), lifts his leg and reaches with an upstretched arm toward a dish, now lost. The disc and cylinder on which he stands likely rested atop a much taller post, with a larger disc or dish below, as preserved in more complete examples and illustrated on numerous ancient vases. In the drinking game kottabos , known by its Greek name but also popular in Etruria, the goal was to knock a dish off its precarious perch, in this case the hand of the dancing satyr, using only the wine dregs in your cup. This lively object was likely used to play a drinking game called kottabos .
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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