Vases Black-figure Amphora Attic Black-Figure Amphora Type B
Attic Black-Figure Amphora Type B

Attic Black-Figure Amphora Type B

Black-figure Princeton Painter · Amphora · about 540 B.C.
Amphora with round handles, a red line around the neck, and a palmette-lotus pattern above the decorative panels. On side A: The recovery of Helen by Menelaus and another warrior. Helen wears a himation partially drawn over hear head and folded over her right forearm. Menelaus striding to right and grasps Helen’s himation with his right hand. The other warrior is behind Helen and walks to right. Each hoplite wears a Corinthian helmet, a cuirass over a short chiton, greaves, and a shield. Side B: Two hoplites in combat between two onlookers. The warrior on the left, the winner of the duel, strides to the right and thrusts his spear in to the left shoulder of his opponent, who collapses to the right and looks back. The falling hoplite wears a high-crested Corinthian helmet and holds a shield (blazon: tripod) and a spear. The spectator on the left is an older man with a white beard and wears a plain himation, the spectator on the right is bearded and wears a striped himation.
Shape
Technique
Date
about 540 B.C.
Culture
Greek (Attic)
Potter
Attribution
Attributed
Dimensions
H: 37.15 cm D: 15.74 cm
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
86.AE.63
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)