Vases Black-figure Amphora Black-Figure Neck-Amphora (Storage Vessel): Herakl...
Black-Figure Neck-Amphora (Storage Vessel): Herakles and Nemean Lion (A); Dionysos, Satyrs, and Maenads (B)
View 1
View 2
View 3

Black-Figure Neck-Amphora (Storage Vessel): Herakles and Nemean Lion (A); Dionysos, Satyrs, and Maenads (B)

Black-figure Painter of Berlin 1899 · Amphora · 515–510 BCE
The neck-amphora, one of the most popular vase shapes in Archaic Athens, provided painters with ample space for both figural and ornamental decoration. Herakles, the greatest of Greek heroes, performs his most famous deed on the obverse, wrestling the Nemean lion. His patron goddess Athena, together with his nephew Iolaos, holding the hero’s club, stand by. On the other side is an unrelated scene, showing the wine god Dionysos with dancing maenads and satyrs. Abundant ornament covers other areas: stylized lotus blossom and palmette chains on the neck; intricately linked palmettes and lotuses beneath each handle; and a key pattern, linked lotus buds, and rays on the lower body.
Shape
Technique
Date
515–510 BCE
Culture
Greek, Attic
Attribution
Attributed
Dimensions
H: 39.80 cm
Medium
ceramic
Museum
Cleveland Museum of Art
Accession Number
1970.16
Image Source
cleveland_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)