Collection:
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ADJUNCT MODULE B: ITALIAN ART
LocalCollection
ADJUNCT MODULE B: ITALIAN ART
Collection
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Preferred Title:
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Red Figure Volute Krater
Work_PrefTitle
Red Figure Volute Krater
Preferred Title
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Image View:
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Detail, one of the female faces in the coil of the volute handle
Image_Title
Detail, one of the female faces in the coil of the volute handle
Image View
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Creator:
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Patera Painter (Ancient Greek vase painter, active ca. 340-ca. 320 BCE)
Agent_Display
Patera Painter (Ancient Greek vase painter, active ca. 340-ca. 320 BCE)
Creator
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Location:
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repository: Museo Nazionale Etrusco (Villa Giulia) (Rome, Lazio, Italy)
Work_Location_Type_D isplay
repository: Museo Nazionale Etrusco (Villa Giulia) (Rome, Lazio, Italy)
Location
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Location Note:
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Piazzale di Villa Giulia, 9
Work_LocationNotes
Piazzale di Villa Giulia, 9
Location Note
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GPS:
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41.918375 12.477657
GPS
41.918375 12.477657
GPS
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Date:
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340-320 BCE (creation)
Work_DateDisplay
340-320 BCE (creation)
Date
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Cultural Context:
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Ancient Greek
Work_Culture
Ancient Greek
Cultural Context
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Style Period:
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Late Classical
Work_StylePeriodDisp lay
Late Classical
Style Period
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Work Type 1:
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red-figure vase painting (visual work)
Work_Worktype1
red-figure vase painting (visual work)
Work Type 1
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Work Type 2:
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volute krater
Work_Worktype2
volute krater
Work Type 2
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Classification:
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Decorative Arts, Utilitarian Objects and Interior Design
Work_Classification
Decorative Arts, Utilitarian Objects and Interior Design
Classification
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Material:
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terracotta; colored slips
Work_MaterialDisplay
terracotta; colored slips
Material
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Technique:
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fabrication attributes: ceramics; red-figure vase painting (image-making)
Work_Technique
fabrication attributes: ceramics; red-figure vase painting (image-making)
Technique
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Subjects:
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death or burial; funerary art; human figure
Work_Image_SubjectDi splay
death or burial; funerary art; human figure
Subjects
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Description:
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A prolific painter, active in Apulia, the Patera Painter was probably located first at Taras, then most likely moved to Canosa. Over 150 examples of his work survive, the majority of them depicting funerary scenes. The (A) side depicts the deceased within a naiskos (grave shrine); the (B) side shows two female figures at the sides of a stele. The volute-krater is named after its handles, which are curled like the volutes on an Ionic capital. Here there are female faces in the center of the volutes. (Source: Union List of Artist Names [online notes]; http://www.getty.edu /research/conducting _research/vocabulari es/ulan)
Work_Description_Sou rce
A prolific painter, active in Apulia, the Patera Painter was probably located first at Taras, then most likely moved to Canosa. Over 150 examples of his work survive, the majority of them depicting funerary scenes. The (A) side depicts the deceased within a naiskos (grave shrine); the (B) side shows two female figures at the sides of a stele. The volute-krater is named after its handles, which are curled like the volutes on an Ionic capital. Here there are female faces in the center of the volutes. (Source: Union List of Artist Names [online notes]; http://www.getty.edu /research/conducting _research/vocabulari es/ulan)
Description
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Collection:
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Adjunct Module B: Italian Art
LocalCollection
Adjunct Module B: Italian Art
Collection
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Identifier:
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7A3-E-VG-RFVV-A05
Image_OriginalVendor ID
7A3-E-VG-RFVV-A05
Identifier
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Rights:
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© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
Image_Rights
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
Rights
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