"Id","dc-title","Chronology","Name","dc-publisher","Redirect","UserLevel","dc-description","Icon","Type","dc-subject","dc-date","dc-creator","Collection" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:146","","Early 4th century B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 146","","","","Wall fragment of stand with projecting moulding at top. Glaze scratched and abraded. P.H. 0.092. Agora XXI, pl. 30: G 8.; ; Woman (head with sakkos) to right. Above, egg pattern. On top of rim, tongues(?) sloppily applied. Graffito between pattern and rim.","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Lebetes Gamikoi | Type 1","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:266","","Ca. 460 B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 266","","","","Two non-joining fragments, P 4811 of rim with start of wall, P 3445 of wall. Narrow band on inside of P 4811 (at rim), another 0.065 below rim. Glaze fired red except for palmette ornament on P 4811 and for contour line on P 3445. P.H. P 4811: 0.079; max. dim. P 3445: 0.107, P 4811: 0.135. E. Vanderpool, Hesperia 15, 1946, p. 286, pl. 36 (P 3445); M. Farnsworth, Archaeology 12, 1959, p. 248, fig. 11 (P 3445).; ; P 4811 preserves a zone of diagonally addorsed palmettes on the rim below the torus and the top of the head of a figure on the wall below. P 3445 shows a woman(?), part of chiton and himation, to left. At the right, an uncertain object, perhaps the back leg of a chair. Preliminary sketch (P 3445).; ; The misfiring of the background is consistently of the same color, not the varying color caused by an overcrowded kiln. Nor is it intentional coral-red. G. M. A. Richter, in a note to Lucy Talcott, suggested that the red is a product of the workman who, in mixing the glaze for filling in the background, in some way altered the proportions of the ingredients. This would account for the uniformity of the red. See Hesperia 15, 1946, p. 286.; ; Perhaps by the Aegisthus Painter. For the ornament, cf. the rims of two calyx-kraters: Vienna 1102 (ARV2 504, 5; Addenda 252) and Bologna 288 (ARV2 504, 6). For the drapery, the best parallel appears to be Florence 3994 (ARV2 505, 18).","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Calyx-Kraters | Single Register","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:269","","Ca. 450 B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 269","","","","Rim fragment. Reserved line on inside at rim; narrow band 0.037 below rim. Max. dim. 0.07. W. B. Dinsmoor, Hesperia Suppl. V, p. 142, figs. 69:30, 70:b; Agora XXI, cat. no. L 5, p. 90, pl. 56.; ; Below torus, zone of diagonally addorsed palmettes. Graffiti incised on reserved areas above and below patterns. Relief line for tendrils.","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Calyx-Kraters | Single Register","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:699","","Probably last quarter of the 5th century B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 699","","","","Shoulder and neck fragment. Glaze misfired reddish brown on neck. Max. dim. 0.07. Agora XXI, p. 33, F 55, pl. 12.; ; Upper left corner of panel with zone of Lesbian cymation. Reserved line for side frames. Graffito incised after firing.; ; For the Lesbian cymation, but better drawn and placed below a band of egg pattern, see Düsseldorf, private collection (JdI 86, 1971, p. 110, fig. 11 and the remarks on p. 114, where K. Peters indicates that other examples of the ornament on choes [usually surmounted by an egg pattern] fall into the last three decades of the 5th century B.C.). Lang (Agora XXI, p. 33, F 55) gives an early-5th-century date for this fragment because (p. 24) ""the eta is misused for epsilon or the dipthong. After the middle of the century epsilon as eta is the exception."" 699 would seem to be such an exception.","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Oinochoai | Shape 3 | Small","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:800","","Ca. 500 B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 800","","","","Wall fragment with start of base. P.H. 0.03; max. dim. 0.096; Agora XXI, p. 33, F 46, pl. 12.; ; A bit of the figured decoration remains, but it is difficult to know what it is, perhaps a large stone(?). Graffito incised after firing.; ; Same underside as two connected with the Epeleios Painter (ARV2 152, ---).","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Oinochoai | Shape 8 | Type C","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:802","","Second quarter of the 5th century B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 802","","","","Part of rim and wall restored in plaster and painted. On underside of floor, circle with central dot. H. 0.087; diam. at rim 0.10. J. McK. Camp, Gods and Heroes in the Athenian Agora (Agora Picture Book 19), Princeton 1980, p. 12, fig. 21; Agora XXI, p. 35, F 78, pl. 14.; ; Opposite handle, Hermes (right leg and hand missing) running to left, wearing a pilos, a short chiton under a chlamys fastened at the throat, and winged boots. In his right hand he holds his kerykeion. Graffito incised between Hermes and the handle. Preliminary sketch.","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Oinochoai | Shape 8 | Type C","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:1386","","Ca. 410-400 B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 1386","","","","Floor fragment. Concentric bands and circles on underside of floor. Max. dim. 0.03; est. outer diam. of tondo 0.09. Burn, Meidias Painter, p. 118, cat. no. MM 148.; ; Woman (lower part of chiton, sandaled feet) seated to left on a klismos (all of one leg, a little of the other). Below, reserved exergue. From the position of her feet, her left leg was crossed over the right. Reserved band for tondo border.; ; Manner of the Meidias Painter, xii: Sundry (ARV2 1329, 118).","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Stemless Cups | Not Known If Decorated On Outside","","","Agora" "Agora:Object:Agora XXX:1466","","Probably third quarter of the 5th century B.C.","Agora XXX, no. 1466","","","","Floor fragment.; ; I (illustrated), woman (left arm with part of chiton) to right. Around tondo, stopped-maeander pattern. A, male (feet) to left. At the right, tendril of handle configuration. Below, re-served line.","","Object","Red Figured And White Ground | Cups | Type B | Decorated On Inside And Outside","","","Agora"