Vases Geometric Italo-Geometric Bird Askos (Oil Vessel): Hunter (H...
Italo-Geometric Bird Askos (Oil Vessel): Hunter (Herakles?) and Stag
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Italo-Geometric Bird Askos (Oil Vessel): Hunter (Herakles?) and Stag

Geometric Bisenzio Class · c. 700 BCE
This bird-shaped <em>askos </em>(oil vessel), with a tall filling spout and a pierced beak for pouring, perhaps held perfumed oil for a funerary function. Although the shape likely stems from Italian tradition, the abundantly painted geometric decoration, covering nearly every available surface, derives originally from Greece. Thus scholars have suggested that an immigrant Greek potter working in Etruria may have made the vessel. The sole narrative scene shows a man with a spear leading an antlered animal. If not an anonymous hunter, this could be the earliest known representation of the hero Herakles performing his third labor: capturing the golden-antlered Keryneian hind, or female deer.
Technique
Date
c. 700 BCE
Culture
Etruscan, likely made at Vulci
Painter
Attribution
Attributed
Dimensions
H: 33.50 cm W: 15.50 cm
Medium
ceramic
Museum
Cleveland Museum of Art
Accession Number
1993.1
Image Source
cleveland_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)