
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Hydria
Attributed to the Antimenes Painter
- Date
- c. 530 BCE
- Medium
- Slip-glazed earthenware
- Culture
- Greek, Attic
- Department
- European Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
The Antimenes Painter was active in Athens in the late 6th century BCE and specialized in decorating large pots, like this hydria, or water jar. In the main scene the goddess Athena, painted white to indicate her gender, helps harness her four-horse chariot, assisted by several grooms and the bearded charioteer. This harnessing technique accurately reflects practices in the period. The appearance of Athena dressed for war may refer to her legendary invention of the war chariot or perhaps to an episode from The Iliad. The scene on the shoulder of the vase depicts Zeus, the central figure, intervening in the fight between Heracles (on Zeus' right) and Cycnus (on his left). This divine battle occurred because Cycnus stole the sacrificial animals of the god Apollo. Greek, Attic, Greece, Europe
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