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    entry=Detroit 76.97 entry=Boston 24.7 entry=Malibu 81.AE.197.2 entry=RISD 28.060 entry=St. Louis 167.1925 entry=Tampa 1991.13 entry=Malibu 88.AA.105 entry=Florence 4209 entry=Florence 4209 entry=Florence 4209 entry=Florence 4209 entry=Boston 67.1006 entry=Harvard 1959.127 entry=Malibu 85.AE.376 entry=Columbia 72.22 entry=Berlin F 1720 entry=Munich 1380 entry=Würzburg L 248 entry=Baltimore, Hopkins BMA 60.55.2 entry=Tampa 86.47 entry=Malibu 86.AE.75 entry=Tampa 86.37 entry=Boston 03.790 entry=Mississippi 1977.3.57 entry=Toledo 1956.70 entry=Diefenthal Collection (Shapiro No. 13) entry=Malibu 77.AE.102 entry=Würzburg L 468 entry=Boston 01.8074 entry=Jacksonville AP.66.21 entry=Tampa 86.27 entry=Mount Holyoke 1967.BS.II.11 entry=Berlin inv. 1958.7 entry=Madison 68.14.1 entry=Munich 1562 entry=Würzburg L 186 entry=Davenport AR 47.58 entry=Mississippi 1977.3.58 entry=Toledo 1956.59 entry=Boston 10.207 entry=Malibu 84.AE.770 entry=Yale 1913.162 entry=Louvre AM 1008 entry=Louvre F 201 entry=Munich 2618 entry=Louvre G 104 entry=Boston 01.8072 entry=Louvre G 135 entry=Munich 2645 entry=Yale 1913.161 entry=Baltimore, Hopkins AIA B10 entry=Boston 98.933 entry=Philadelphia MS2448 entry=Berlin F 2285 entry=Boston 10.195 entry=Harvard 1972.44 entry=Philadelphia 31-19-2 entry=Hartford 1963.40 entry=Louvre CA 453 entry=London E 439 entry=London D 13 entry=Louvre G 175 entry=Munich 2305 entry=Tampa 86.91 entry=RISD 56.061 entry=Malibu 88.AE.66 entry=Boston 08.417 entry=Bowdoin 1913.30 entry=Raleigh G.79.11.5 entry=Boston 01.8032 entry=Malibu 83.AE.42 entry=Harvard 1895.248 entry=Tampa 86.71 entry=Boston 95.56 entry=Lecce 570 entry=Boston 63.1246 entry=RISD 57.266 entry=Munich 2322 entry=London D 48 entry=Boston 00.359 entry=Mississippi 1977.3.97 entry=Boston 93.104 entry=Boston 99.539 entry=Louvre G 402 entry=Boston 03.796 entry=Yale 1913.322 entry=London F 174 entry=Berlin F 2538 entry=Louvre G 457 entry=London 1978.6-15.1 entry=London F 159 entry=RISD 25.067 entry=Malibu 82.AE.16 entry=Palermo 2187 entry=Toledo 1977.30 entry=RISD 11.018 entry=Athens, Agora P19228 entry=Athens, NM 20049 entry=Boston 03.784 entry=Boston 24.453 entry=Boston 66.816 entry=Cleveland 15.532 entry=Cleveland 27.145 entry=Cleveland 85.175 entry=Florence 81947 entry=Izmir 12548 entry=London E 695 entry=Mount Holyoke 1932.BS.II.6 entry=Munich 2654 entry=Munich 8766 entry=New York 31.11.13 entry=Ruvo, Jatta 901 entry=Verona 25653 entry=Yale 1913.128

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    Harvard 1960.347

    Collection:Cambridge, Harvard University Art Museums
    Summary:Dionysos seated amid attendants and gods.
    Ware:Attic Red Figure Shape:Hydria-kalpis
    Painter:Attributed to the Class of Brussels A 3099 Potter:
    Context:Said to be from Nola Region:Campania
    Date:ca. 410 B.C. - 400 B.C. Period:Classical
    Dimensions:

    H. 0.355 m.

    Primary Citation:ARV2, 1341, 2; Beazley Addenda 2, 367.Beazley Archive Database Number:217539



    For more information, please see the published catalog Buitron No. 80

    Decoration Description:

    The beardless Dionysos sits in the center, his legs to the left and his head turned to the right. He sits upon his cloak, one end of which lies over his right knee; he is otherwise nude except for a white fillet and a wreath of ivy. He cradles a thyrsos in his left arm, the lower end of which passes behind a small leopard or panther. The latter is painted with added white, tinted yellow with dilute glaze to represent the furry pelt. A woman in a belted peplos pets the panther; she may be Ariadne, as she has no maenadic attributes. Behind her at the right, is a second woman, separated from her by a stylized plant; a similar plant -- lotus bud, tendrils, acanthus -- grows behind the satyr at left. The woman is seated on her himation, her legs to the right and her head turned to the left. She wears a chiton and white stephane; her hair is tied in a chignon. To the left of Dionysos, and gesturing toward him with his left hand, is a bearded satyr, who holds a thyrsos in his other hand. He too wears a white fillet and an ivy wreath; a branch of ivy floats in the field between him and the god. Seated above, at left and right, in what is apparently the celestial or divine sphere, are Aphrodite and Hermes. Aphrodite, at left, wears a himation, white stephane, and a close-fitting chiton secured with a belt; her hair is tied in a chignon. Her son Eros, drawn with added white, flies toward her with a white wreath or necklace. The beardless Hermes, seated at right and facing right, sits on his cloak, one end of which falls over his leg; he is otherwise nude, except for a white fillet. He holds his herald's wand (kerykeion) in his left hand. Standing before him is another figure of Eros (not painted white) wearing a white fillet.

    Band of egg & dart pattern around lower neck; egg-pattern around the rim and around the roots of all three handles; top of mouth reserved; reserved fillet between foot and body; single, upright palmette and tendrils beneath both side handles. On the back, above the maeander band, is an unusually elaborate complex of palmettes, tendrils, buds, and acanthus. Circling the lower body, and providing a groundline for some of the figures, is a band consisting of groups of three maeanders to left alternating with checkerboards.

    Comparanda:

    Beazley recognized that this vase is connected in shape and style with another hydria, Brussels A 3099 (ARV2, 1341, 1), which also features Dionysos seated amid satyrs and maenads. He thought the floral designs might be by the same hand, but not the figure-work, though it has the same general character. Beazley suggested that the youth with the kerykeion might be Oinopion, the human charged by Dionysos with introducing wine to humanity; his task makes him a sort of herald, so that the kerykeion is not inappropriate. After centuries of the kerykeion being the principal attribute of Hermes, however, it is hard to disassociate him from this figure without a more telling reason; see Buitron 1972, 147..

    Collection History:

    ex Hamburger coll., Frankfurt; Loebbecke coll., Braunschweig; Bequest of David M. Robinson.

    Condition:

    Broken and repaired, with some missing pieces restored and re-painted. Some areas misfired red, particularly the mouth and neck. Weathering of the added white, especially the panther.

    Shape Description:

    Kalpis hydria: deep shoulder; foot in three degrees (grooved disk with two rounded risers); concave neck; ovolo rim with groove at top; horizontal handles deeply incurved.

    Sources Used:

    CVA, Robinson 3; Buitron 1972.

    Other Bibliography:

    Robinson exhibition catalogue 1961, no. 107; CVA, Robinson 3, 22, pl. 13; Buitron 1972, 146-147, no. 80.

    (Michael Padgett)







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