Terracotta lekythos (oil flask)
This vase exemplifies Attic white-ground funerary lekythoi at their finest. Funerary representations of the sixth century B.C. depicted the deceased surrounded by mourners. By the middle of the fifth century, the deceased was shown either as living or not at all. The figure at the left is a mourner; the deceased is identifiable by the diminutive soul fluttering above his head.
Artwork Details
- Title: Terracotta lekythos (oil flask)
- Artist: Attributed to the Achilles Painter
- Period: Classical
- Date: ca. 440 BCE
- Culture: Greek, Attic
- Medium: Terracotta; white-ground
- Dimensions: H. 14 3/4 in. (37.39 cm)
- Classification: Vases
- Credit Line: Gift of Norbert Schimmel Trust, 1989
- Object Number: 1989.281.72
- Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art
Audio
1052. Terracotta lekythos (oil flask), Part 1
Accustomed as we are to white paper and canvas surfaces for drawing, it is easy to take for granted the freedom and subtlety of line that are possible on a vase prepared as this one was, with a white ground. This lekythos, or oil flask, was decorated by a master draftsman, who has been named the Achilles Painter. He worked at Athens in the middle of the fifth century B.C.
The lekythos was made for the tomb. In its decoration, two young men meet at a gravestone adorned with fillets, woolen ribbons tied around it. With line alone, the Achilles Painter gives his figures the monumentality of sculpted images. Look at the line that describes the shoulder of the man to the right, how its variations in thickness suggest the volume of the body. The painter drew the figures as nudes and then covered them with colored garments, which have faded to transparency.
The young men stand with such apparent vitality that one assumes they are both alive. But over the head of the boy to the right, there is a tiny winged figure. This is his psyche, or soul, the only clear indication that he is in fact dead. The other young man has come to remember him or to bring offerings. The living and the dead meet with the gravestone between them, like equal quantities on either side of a balance.
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