cma-greek-roman-art:Hydria, Antimenes Painter, c. 520 BC, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman A
cma-greek-roman-art:Hydria, Antimenes Painter, c. 520 BC, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman ArtThe styles of the Antimenes Painter and of Psiax were so close that the great vase-painting expert, Sir John Beazley, has referred to them as “brothers.” Both were active in the last decades of the 6th century BC when the new red-figure style came to dominate vase production in Athens, but only Psiax produced vases in black- and red - figure. Some figures on this hydria are very close in style to those on the eye kylix (CMA 1976.89) by Psiax. Both artists delighted in intricate detail and curvilinear designs. Shoulder: Theseus slaying the Cretan Minotaur Main panel: Quadriga (four-horse chariot) and warriors Predella: Lions attacking a doe; two stags.Size: Overall: 43.2 cm (17 in. Diameter of rim: 24.7 cm (9 ¾ in. Diameter of foot: 15.2 cm (6 in.)Medium: black-figure terracottahttps://clevelandart.org/art/1975.1 -- source link
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