Black-Figure Lekythos (Oil Vessel): Pan Presenting Hare to Woman

Cleveland Museum of Art

Black-Figure Lekythos (Oil Vessel): Pan Presenting Hare to Woman

Asteas/Python Workshop

Date
c. 330–320 BCE
Medium
ceramic
Culture
South Italian, Paestan
Department
Greek and Roman Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

This round-bodied oil vessel, produced in Paestum, belongs to a small group of vessels decorated with black figure in the second half of the fourth century BC, long after the technique had previously fallen out of fashion. Unlike most such vessels, which are smaller and feature just a single figure (often a woman or bird), this one shows a more complex and colorful scene. The goat-legged god Pan perches on a branched tree trunk, holding his syrinx (panpipe) and a hare. Facing him, her hands on the trunk, is a draped woman, perhaps a nymph or the moon goddess Selene. Although his name means “all” in Greek, Pan is primarily a god of shepherds.

The authoritative record is held by Cleveland Museum of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Cleveland Museum of Art and other institutions.