1925.30.33: Column Krater (mixing bowl for wine and water): Youth Playing a Lyre
Vessels
This object does not yet have a description.
Identification and Creation
- Object Number
- 1925.30.33
- People
-
Attributed to The Harrow Painter
- Title
- Column Krater (mixing bowl for wine and water): Youth Playing a Lyre
- Classification
- Vessels
- Work Type
- vessel
- Date
- c. 490-470 BCE
- Places
- Creation Place: Ancient & Byzantine World, Europe, Attica
- Period
- Archaic period, Late, to Early Classical
- Culture
- Greek
- Persistent Link
- https://hvrd.art/o/291116
Location
- Location
-
Level 3, Room 3400, Ancient Mediterranean and Middle Eastern Art, Ancient Greece in Black and Orange
Physical Descriptions
- Medium
- Terracotta; pale reddish clay, black paint fired reddish-brown
- Technique
- Red-figure
- Dimensions
- body: 30.8 x 25.1 cm (12 1/8 x 9 7/8 in.)
Provenance
- Recorded Ownership History
-
Excavated from Tomb V, Poggio Sommavilla, Italy by Fausto Benedetti, Italy (1896-1897), sold; to Joseph Clark Hoppin, Boston (1897-1925), bequest; to the Fogg Art Museum, 1925.
State, Edition, Standard Reference Number
- Standard Reference Number
- Beazley Archive Database #202889
Acquisition and Rights
- Credit Line
- Harvard Art Museums/Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Bequest of Joseph C. Hoppin
- Accession Year
- 1925
- Object Number
- 1925.30.33
- Division
- Asian and Mediterranean Art
- Contact
- am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu
- Permissions
-
The Harvard Art Museums encourage the use of images found on this website for personal, noncommercial use, including educational and scholarly purposes. To request a higher resolution file of this image, please submit an online request.
Descriptions
- Description
- Side A: In the center a youth wrapped in a mantle, seated to right on a square object holding in his left a lyre the strings of which are now missing but were originallly applied in white as shown by a few traces. Facing him a bearded man to left entirely wrapped in his mantle and leaning on a staff. At the left a second youth clad in a cloak which leaves his right arm and shoulder bare, holding a staff in his right. In the field a pair of halteres, a sponge and a strigil. Side B: Bearded man with staff and youth facing each other, both entirely wrapped in their cloaks. In the field a sponge. Hair outlines reserved in all figures. On outer edge of rim ivy leaf band. On neck, A, lotus bud chain with points downwards. Pictures framed by a tongue pattern above, ivy leaves at sides. On base, rays. Execution fair, that of A superior to that of B. Rim broken and repaired.
Publication History
- Joseph Clark Hoppin and Albert Gallatin, Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum, U.S.A.: volume 1, Hoppin and Gallatin Collections, Libraire Ancienne Edouard Champion (Paris, 1926)
- J. D. Beazley, [Review of Hoppin C.V.A.], The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies (London, England, 1927), 47
Exhibition History
- HAA132e The Ideal of the Everyday in Greek Art (S427) Spring 2012, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 01/31/2012 - 05/12/2012
- 32Q: 3400 Greek, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, 10/03/2023 - 01/01/2050
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Verification Level
This record has been reviewed by the curatorial staff but may be incomplete. Our records are frequently revised and enhanced. For more information please contact the Division of Asian and Mediterranean Art at am_asianmediterranean@harvard.edu