
Getty Museum
Lakonian Black-Figure Kylix; detached fragments
Creator
Boreads PainterPainter
All works by this person →The Boreads Painter directed one of the most important pottery workshops in Sparta some time in the years between 575 and 550 B.C. He decorated vases in the black-figure technique and may also have been a potter. As with most vase-painters, the real name of the Boreads Painter is unknown, and he is identified only by the style of his work, namely his particular way of drawing figures' eyes, ears,
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- 570–565 B.C.
- Medium
- Terracotta
- Culture
- Greek (Lakonian)
- Department
- Vessels
- Institution
- Getty Museum
On the interior of this Lakonian or Spartan black-figure kylix or cup, the Greek hero Bellerophon battles the monstrous Chimaera, a fire-breathing creature that combines elements of a lion, a snake, and a goat. In most depictions of this myth, a favorite among Greek artists in the 600s and early 500s B.C., Bellerophon rides Pegasos, his winged horse, but here he has dismounted, still holding the reins. While Pegasos strikes at the Chimaera with his hooves, Bellerophon spears the monster from underneath. The unique, symmetrical arrangement of the rearing horse and monster framing the hero is the result of the artist's attempt to find creative ways to fill the circular area of the interior of a cup. Three ornamental bands and palmettes at the handles decorate the cup's exterior. Lakonian vase-painters specialized in the decoration of cups; this example, with its high foot and slanting rim, fits the typical form. Both the interest in narrative and the use of the black-figure technique were new to Lakonian vase-painting when this vase was produced.
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