Apulian Oinochoe, shape 8 (Mug), with Lid

Getty Museum

Apulian Oinochoe, shape 8 (Mug), with Lid

Virginia Exhibition Group
Date
about 320–310 B.C.
Medium
Terracotta
Culture
South Italian (Apulian)
Department
Vessels
Institution
Getty Museum

Reconstructed from fragments. The vase has a flaring mouth above a narrower, rather tall neck. The body curves outward in an elongated oval, and is joined to the foot in two degrees by a short stem. The double-loop handle is tied in the form of a Herakles knot. The lid has a knob, which has the appearance of a bottle-like element, with a vent-hole at its top and two rows of upright acanthus leaves around the base. On the lid, three enclosed palmettes, with a rosette in each of two of the fields between them, and a phiale in the other. The knob retains traces of pink; the lower leaves are alternating blue and pink, the upper, all blue; brown defines the veins and details of the leaves. The underside of the lid is reserved. On the body: a female head in three-quarter view to right emerges from a large flower, surrounded by leafy scrolls (probably representing acanthus) and flowers. The details of her face are no longer visible. Under the lip: black tongues on reserved band between black line borders. Neck: between narrow reserved lines, a black band with alternating rosettes and phialai; faint traces of added white that marked tops of the rosette petals remain. Shoulder: egg pattern between two reserved bands. Below the handle: large palmette-fan with side-scrolls and half-fans. Lower body: reverse wave between two reserved bands. Stem of foot: reserved. Only very slight traces of added white that was used for details and patterns on body remain. After Jentoft-Nilsen, M. R. and Trendall, A.D., CVA Malibu 3 (1990).

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

Get printable QR codes

Open QR codes for this object page and the museum record. They stay collapsed until needed.

Open this page
See at Getty Museum

Related across collections

Semantically similar works from Getty Museum and other institutions.