Attic Red-Figure Kylix

Getty Museum

Attic Red-Figure Kylix

Creator

Onesimos

Painter

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Artist

"Onesimos" means "profitable" in Greek and may have been a nickname. Onesimos worked in Athens in the early 400s B.C. decorating vases. He painted vases primarily in the red-figure technique, but he also decorated some white-ground vases. Although many vase-painters tended to specialize in certain types of vases, Onesimos was unusual in the degree to which he decorated cups almost exclusively. He

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Date
500–490 B.C.
Medium
Terracotta
Culture
Greek (Attic)
Department
Vessels
Institution
Getty Museum

Satyrs were part-human, part-horse companions of the wine-god Dionysos. Frequently shown behaving as mortals should not, their lustful pursuits were a favorite theme on symposium vessels. Filling the interior of this fragmentary red-figure cup (*kylix*), a satyr crawls over a large rocky outcrop toward a sleeping maenad, whom he seeks to kiss. The maenad, a female follower of Dionysos, reclines on a striped cushion. To judge from similar scenes on other vases, she will be able to repel the satyr’s advances. In the background hangs a wineskin, inscribed with the word ‘beautiful’. Around it, perhaps conveying the thoughts of the satyr, is another inscription, ‘the girl is beautiful’. Each side of the exterior of the cup once displayed a figure of a satyr shown in a complex pose. The better preserved is depicted from behind; only the profile-view legs, tail, and drinking horn remain of the other. Perhaps these two figures depict the same satyr in pursuit of his desire, and the interior the moment when he finally encounters her.

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