
Getty Museum
Attic Black-Figure Lip Cup
Creator
Phrynos PainterArtist
All works by this person →The Phrynos Painter worked in Athens, decorating vases in the black figure technique in the period from about 560 to 540 B.C. He mainly decorated cups, as well as a few small amphoras. Liveliness and movement characterize the work of the Phrynos Painter. He included many details in his drawing and used a great deal of added red to elaborate his figures. He also typically placed panthers on either
More on Getty ULAN- Date
- about 550 B.C.
- Medium
- Terracotta
- Culture
- Greek (Attic)
- Department
- Vessels
- Institution
- Getty Museum
The hero Herakles wrestles the Nemean Lion on both sides of this Athenian black-figure Little Master cup. The Nemean Lion was a monstrous beast sent by the goddess Hera to ravage the countryside around Nemea in southern Greece. Since the lion had an impenetrable hide, Herakles had to strangle it in the first of his twelve labors. Little Master cups, introduced around 560 B.C. and so-named for their detailed miniature decoration, had a taller, slimmer shape than earlier cups. Little Master cups were either lip cups or band cups, easily differentiated by the placement of their decoration. A standard lip cup was decorated with a compact scene of one to three figures centered on each side of the lip with an inscription below, in the zone between the handles. The inscription might be a motto, an artist's signature, a nonsensical combination of letters or even a row of blobs that imitate letters. The text on this cup – repeated with minor variations on both sides – looks to be meaningless, but could evoke drunken gibberish, or perhaps even enthusiastic support for Herakles’ endeavor.
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