AN APULIAN RED-FIGURE VOLUTE KRATER attributed to the Group of Copenhagen 4223

细节
AN APULIAN RED-FIGURE VOLUTE KRATER attributed to the Group of Copenhagen 4223
CIRCA 350-325 B.C.

Side A: Standing within a naiskos, a nude male figure in added white leans on a leafless tree, a chithara in his raised right hand, a mantle draped over his left, and a maltese dog raised on its hind legs to his right, around the naiskos, two male and two female offering bearers, the neck with a profile head wearing a mitre, emerging from a lotus in a floral setting, the volutes with molded mascaroons in the form of facing heads, a band of tongue below, bands of ivy, bead and reel, and wave above.

Side B: A funerary stela topped with a kantharos in the center, a standing woman to the left wearing a peplos with a wreath and basket, a nude youth to the right standing with a patera in one hand, a branch and mantle in the other, the neck with palmettes, a band of tongue below, laurel and wave above, the volutes with molded mascaroons in the form of facing heads.

A band of meander with cross-squares below each scene, egg-and-dot on the rim, palmettes below each handle, four plastic swan heads on the shoulders, repaired and restored, misfired, 27 7/8in. (70.8cm.) high
出版
Trendall and Camitoglou, Second Supplement to RVAp, Part I, p. 126, no. 17/40a.

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