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Groups of Mid-Sixth-Century Black-Figure
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2013
Extract
The title calls for a word of explanation. I use ‘mid-sixth-century black-figure’ as a convenient term for the vases made not only in 550 B.C., but in the decade or so before and the two decades after the middle of the century: the work of Lydos, Exekias, the Amasis painter, and their contemporaries. I shall not say much about the cups of the period, for I have already dealt with the chief sort, the ‘little-master cups,’ elsewhere (JHS. 52, pp. 167–204). The shapes we shall be mainly concerned with are the amphora, the neck-amphora, and the hydria; which, with the cup, are the dominant shapes in this and the succeeding phase of black-figure. My order will be not strictly chronological, but not quite arbitrary either.
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- Copyright © The Council, British School at Athens 1932
References
page 1 note 1 Abbreviations: ABS = Beazley, Attic Black-figure: a Sketch; Hoppin = Hoppin, Handbook of Greek Black-figured Vases; Pfuhl = Pfuhl, Malerei und Zeichnung der Griechen.
I owe my thanks to Marchesa Isabella Guglielmi di Vulci, and to Captain E. G. Spencer-Churchill, for kindly allowing me to publish vases in their collections; and to Dr. L. D. Caskey, Mr. A. O. Curie, Prof. R. Delbriick, Mr. A. Dieudonné, Prof. C. Dugas, Mr. E. J. Forsdyke, Mr. de Genlis, Dr. F. J. Mather, Mr. A. Merlin, Dr. H. Möbius, Dr. J. Sieveking, vases in Boston, Edinburgh, Bonn, the Cabinet des Médailles, Montpellier, London, Boulogne, Princeton, the Louvre, Cassel, and Munich.
page 4 note 1 Pfuhl, Meisterwerke p. 17 = Masterpieces p. 27 near the top.