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Download krater wine
Download krater wine










Paul Getty Museum (Los Angeles, CA, 2013), pp. Bennett, and Clemente Marconi, ed., Sicily: Art and Invention between Greece and Rome, exh.

download krater wine

Zerrin Iren Boynudelik and Mahmut Boynudelik, The Color of Olive: Olive Images in Art History (Zeytinin Renkleri: Sanat Tarihinde Zeytin Imgesi), Umur Yayinlari (Istanbul, Turkey, 2011), p. Paul Getty Museum (Los Angeles, CA, 2004-2012), II 3.a Purification, Gr.

  • Thesaurus Cultus et Rituum Antiquorum, J.
  • and Christine Kondoleon, Games for the Gods: The Greek Athlete and the Olympic Spirit, MFA Publications (Boston, MA, 2004), no. Stephen Miller, Ancient Greek Athletics, Yale University Press (New Haven, 2004), p. Rosalba Panvini and Filippo Giudice, Ta Attika: Attic Figured Vases From Gela, L'Erma di Bretschneider (Rome, 2003), p. Matheson, Polygnotos and Vase Painting in Classical Athens (The University of Wisconsin Press, 1995), pp. Recomposed from fragments, with some inpainting. Under rim: olive wreath ground line: meander pattern tongue pattern at handle attachments.

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    Side B: Three youths, one with strigil, another with staff. Side A: Torch race: two runners with torches, altar, olive tree, prize hydria (water jar).

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    To request a higher resolution file of this image, please submit an online request. RobinsonĪsian and Mediterranean Harvard Art Museums encourage the use of images found on this website for personal, noncommercial use, including educational and scholarly purposes. State, Edition, Standard Reference Number Robinson, Baltimore, MD, (by 1937-1958), bequest to Fogg Art Museum, 1960.

    download krater wine

    Jacob Hirsch, Geneva and Lucerne, (by 1937), sold to David M. View this object's location on our interactive mapģ6.1 cm h x 39.6 cm diam. The vessel was exported to Gela, a Greek city in Sicily (Italy).īell Krater (bowl for mixing wine and water): Torch RaceĪlternate Title: Red-figure Bell Krater: Torch Race with Prize Hydria Three YouthsĬreation Place: Ancient & Byzantine World, Europe, Gela (Sicily) The olive tree at right suggests that the race honored the goddess Athena and was an Athenian event. Their bulky bodies and tiny genitalia express physical aptitude and sexual modesty. Reflecting actual practice, the youthful runners are shown nude (“gymnastics” comes from Greek gymnos, “naked”). On this mixing bowl for wine and water, competitors in a torch race run toward an altar with a man in priestly robes and the metal water jar (hydria) awarded to the victor. Ancient Greek athletic games took place in a religious context.












    Download krater wine