Vases Apulian Plate
Apulian Plate

Apulian Plate

Stoke-on-Trent Painter · about 330–320 B.C.
Shallow bowl with a raised flat rim, and a foot in two degrees on a thick short stem.
Tondo: head of a woman in profile to left. She wears a hair covering (kekryphalos) decorated with black and white stripes, a band of white crenellated pattern on black, and a solid white upper portion. Her hair comes down below the kekryphalos in three wavy lines. The bunch of hair at the back is tied with a wavy white ribbon, and on the hair above the brow is a radiate stephane. The woman wears a pendant earring and a double-strand necklace. To the left in the field are two dot-clusters and a white-edged ivyleaf.

The tondo has a wave-pattern border, with a thick black stripe beneath it, between two reserved bands. Around the rim: thick black strokes. The outside of the bowl is lusterless black; with a reserved band at the junction of foot and body. The underside of the foot is reserved and decorated with a wide black stripe.

After Jentoft-Nilsen, M. R. and Trendall, A.D., CVA Malibu 3 (1990).
Date
about 330–320 B.C.
Culture
South Italian (Apulian)
Attribution
Attributed
Dimensions
H: 4.50 cm D: 7.00 cm
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
71.AE.243
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)