Red-Figure Skyphos Fragment (part of 93.AE.54)

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Red-Figure Skyphos Fragment (part of 93.AE.54)

Creator

Kleophrades Painter

Painter

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Artist

Working in Athens in the period from about 505 to 475 B.C, the Kleophrades Painter was a prolific vase-painter--more than one hundred vases attributed to him survive. He very likely was the pupil of Euthymides, one of the group of the red-figure Pioneers. He primarily worked in the red-figure technique but occasionally used the black-figure technique with enough facility that he may have been trai

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Date
about 480–470 B.C.
Medium
Terracotta
Culture
Greek (Attic)
Department
Vessels
Institution
Getty Museum

Exterior: part of a draped upper arm and shoulder of a figure facing to the right, likely a woman wearing a chiton with a cloak over her shoulders. Behind the draped figure are woolen fillets added in red. The fillets attach to a priest’s staff shown in a pair of joining fragments (Leipzig T 3725 and 95.AE.31.2). Interior: black. This fragment belongs to a partially reconstructed skyphos (93.AE.54) that depicts on side A: Peleus and Thetis, with their child Achilles, meeting Cheiron, in the company of Apollo, and on side B: a priest holding a temple key and a staff, a woman shaking hands with a seated figure, and two standing figures—perhaps the priest Chryses meeting Agamemnon to recover his daughter Chryseis (see Williams, 1997, who notes other joining fragments in Leipzig). This fragment belongs to side B.

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