Vases Black-figure Amphora Attic Black-Figure Amphora
Attic Black-Figure Amphora

Attic Black-Figure Amphora

Black-figure Leagros Group · Amphora · about 510 B.C.
The vase is reconstructed from fragments.

Side A: Herakles and the Erymanthean boar. Herakles, dressed in his lionskin and carrying his quiver, bow, and sword, holds the huge boar head down on his shoulder. He steps up with one foot onto the pithos in which Eurystheus cowers with arms upraised. The scene is flanked by Athena (with spear and shield) and another female onlooker.

Side B: Departure of a warrior. In the centre, a hoplite with low-crested Corinthian helmet, spear and round shield (blazon: recumbent dog?) stands facing left, accompanied by a dog. Before him, an old man with a scepter gestures with his right hand, while a woman looks on from the right, also gesturing. The warrior’s shield and much of the woman’s drapery are a reddish colour, due to misfiring.

On the neck, addorsed palmettes; below the handles, complex palmette tendril patterns; below the figural scenes, bands of interlinked upright lotus buds and upright rays. The foot is painted black.
Shape
Technique
Date
about 510 B.C.
Culture
Greek (Attic)
Painter
Attribution
Attributed
Dimensions
H: 43.00 cm D: 14.30 cm
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
86.AE.83
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)