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Red-figured water jar (hydria), attributed to the Lipari Painter

-320/-310

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

The Lipari Painter liked to enliven the traditional black-and-red colour scheme of his vases by adding a wide range of colours after firing, including pink, blue, red and yellow. Like the colours added to Athenian white-ground lekythoi, such colours do not wear very well, and it seems likely that most of these polychrome vases were made to be placed in tombs as offerings.On this hydria, traces of red and a vivid blue are preserved, as well as the white clay that was applied before firing. The funerary scene on the vase also suggests that it was a tomb offering. The impassive-looking woman on the left, holding a fan or parasol, may be a slave or other attendant, while her more emotional companion on the right looks like a relative of the dead person whose tomb they visit. This woman's expression is anguished and she pulls a fold of her cloak before her face. She carries a box of eggs, an offering for the dead.

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  • Title: Red-figured water jar (hydria), attributed to the Lipari Painter
  • Date Created: -320/-310
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 33.40cm; Diameter: 20.00cm; Weight: 1.50g
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: painted
  • Subject: tomb/mausoleum
  • Registration number: 1970,0619.1
  • Production place: Made in Sicily
  • Producer: Attributed to Lipari Painter
  • Period/culture: Sicilian
  • Material: pottery
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Purchased from Folio Fine Art Ltd. Purchased through Christie's
British Museum

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