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Encyclopedia > Achilles Painter
Oedipus and the Sphinx, amphora by the Achilles Painter, Staatliche Antikensammlungen (SL 474)
Oedipus and the Sphinx, amphora by the Achilles Painter, Staatliche Antikensammlungen (SL 474)

The Achilles Painter, working from the 460s to the 420s BC, is the pseudonym of an Attic Greek vase-painter of outstanding quality (see Pottery of Ancient Greece), whose refined figure of Achilles on a red-figure amphora of ca. 450–445 BCE in the Vatican Museum inspired Sir John Beazley to name its anonymous draftsman the "Achilles Painter." The Vatican amphora is thus the namepiece of the "Achilles Painter". The painter, to judge by his style, was a student of the equally-famous Berlin Painter, whose workshop he assumed about 460 BC; the artist's hand is now recognized on more than three hundred vases in three techniques, black-figure, red-figure, and white-ground. Image File history File links Metadata Size of this preview: 351 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (1688 × 2884 pixel, file size: 1. ... Image File history File links Metadata Size of this preview: 351 × 600 pixelsFull resolution (1688 × 2884 pixel, file size: 1. ... Oedipus with the Sphinx, from an Attic red-figure cylix from the Vatican Museum, ca. ... The Great Sphinx of Giza, with the Pyramid of Khafre in the background For other uses, see Sphinx (disambiguation). ... Amphoræ on display in Bodrum Castle, Turkey An amphora is a type of ceramic vase with two handles, used for the transportation and storage of perishable goods and more rarely as containers for the ashes of the dead or as prize awards. ... The Staatliche Antikensammlungen (State Collections of Antiques) in the Kunstareal of Munich is a museum for the Bavarian states antique collections for Greek, Etruscan and Roman art. ... Bilingual amphora by the Andokides Painter, ca. ... The Wrath of Achilles, by François-Léon Benouville (1821–1859) (Musée Fabre) In Greek mythology, Achilles (also Akhilleus or Achilleus) (Ancient Greek: ) was a hero of the Trojan War, the central character and greatest warrior of Homers Iliad, which takes for its theme, not the War... Woman officiating at an altar, Attic red-figure kylix by Chairias, c. ... Amphoræ on display in Bodrum Castle, Turkey An amphora is a type of ceramic vase with two handles, used for the transportation and storage of perishable goods and more rarely as containers for the ashes of the dead or as prize awards. ... Categories: Stub | Vatican City ... Sir John Davidson Beazley (Glasgow, Scotland, 1885 - Oxford, England, 1970) was an English Classical scholar. ... The Berlin Painter (working c. ... The black-figure pottery technique is a style of ancient Greek pottery painting in which the decoration appears as black silhouettes on a red background. ... Woman officiating at an altar, Attic red-figure kylix by Chairias, c. ... The White Ground Technique of vase painting was developed in the late 6th century BCE in Athens, Greece. ...


In his early vases the Achilles Painter favored isolated figures against a black ground, often with themes of pursuit. His simple, balanced, two-figure compositions are a hallmark, and one of the reasons he is considered the most "classical" of all vase-painters of the classical period in the mid 5th century.


The Achilles Painter is known also for his white-ground lekythoi or oil-flasks for weddings and funerals, executed from the 450s to the 420s BC, among them some of the finest Attic painted pottery. His work bears a great variety of Kalos inscriptions. Theseus and the Marathonian bull, white-ground lekythos, ca. ... Attic kylix with the inscription Kleomelos Kalos The Kalos inscription was a form of epigraph found on Attic vases in antiquity, common between 550 and 450 BCE and usually found on symposion vessels. ...


Almost a dozen recognizable lesser painters passed through the Achilles Painter's workshop.


External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Achilles Painter
  • John H. Oakley, "The Achilles Painter"
  • The Achilles Painter on-line

  Results from FactBites:
 
Red-figure pottery - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (442 words)
The painter would paint the vase using an instrument like a pastry bag with a syringelike nozzle of bone or wood to lay out the fine detail lines and background colors.
Since the paint only developed its color once the piece was fired in a kiln, the painter had to paint almost entirely from memory, unable to see his previous work.
In the large kraters painted with the red-figure technique, this meant that tens of thousands of invisible lines had to be applied, each ending precisely at the right point to prevent overlapping in the intricate detailwork, in an extremely short period of time.
Achilles (1541 words)
Achilles was the son of Peleus, king of the Myrmidons in Phthia (SE Thessaly), and the sea nymph Thetis.
According to legend, Thetis had tried to make Achilles invincible by dipping him in the river Styx, but forgot to wet the heel she held him by, leaving him vulnerable so he could be killed by a blow to that heel.
The Ambassadors of Agamemnon in the Tent of Achilles
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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