Vases Red-figure Oinochoe Pitcher (trefoil oinochoe)
Pitcher (trefoil oinochoe)

Pitcher (trefoil oinochoe)

Red-figure Oinochoe · about 340 B.C.
A centaur wearing a white wreath trots to the left, carrying a sapling with white leaves over his right shoulder and a boulder under his left arm. A hare and two birds hang from the tree. A band of wave-pattern circles the lower neck, and the shoulder is filled by a broad band of tongues. The lateral frames consist of tall, scrolling tendrils enclosed within narrow rectangles. The groundline is a band of dotted egg-pattern. There are large palmettes and floral ornaments on the back. In Attic vase-painting, the tree branch hung with small game was an attribute of the wise centaur Cheiron. The boulder, however, one would expect to see carried by one of the wild centaurs who broke up the wedding of Perithoos or who attacked Herakles at the well of Pholos. This, then is an all-purpose centaur, equipped by the artist with all of the traditional attributes but without a reference to a specific story or individual. Compare an oinochoe of shape 10, also from the Pilos Head Group, with a very similar centaur carrying a sapling with a dead hare: Vienna 828 (Trendall, LCS, p. 271, no. 6/291, pl. 109, 3). For Cheiron, see M. Gisler-Huwiler, LIMC, III, 1, pp. 237-248; III, 2, pls. 185-197. (text from Vase-Painting in Italy, catalogue entry no. 82) ITALIAN VASE PAINTING in ITALY, #82 (1970.363) Oinochoe (shape 2) Attributed to the Pilos Head Group about 340 B.C. A centaur wearing a white wreath trots to the left, carrying a sapling with white leaves over his right shoulder and a boulder under his left arm. A hare and two birds hang from the tree. A band of wave-pattern circles the lower neck, and the shoulder is filled by a broad band of tongues. The lateral frames consisit of tall, scrolling tendrils enclosed within narrow rectangles. The groundline is a band of dotted egg-pattern. There are large palmettes and floral ornaments on the back. In Attic vase-painting, the tree branch hung with small game was an attribute of the wise centaur Cheiron. The boulder, however, one would expect to see carried by one of the wild centaurs who broke up the wedding of Perithoos or who attacked Herakles at the well of Pholos. This, then, is an all-purpose centaur, equipped by the artist with all of the traditional attributes but without reference to a specific story or individual. Compare an oinochoe of shape 10, also from the Pilos Head Group, with a very similar centaur carrying a sapling with a dead hare: Vienna 828 (Trendall, LCS, p. 171, no. 6/291, pl. 109, 3). For Cheiron, see M. Gisler-Hawiler, LIMC, III, 1, pp. 237-248; III, 2, pls. 185-197.
Shape
Technique
Period
Late Classical Period
Date
about 340 B.C.
Culture
Greek, South Italian
Dimensions
H: 62.23 cm
Medium
Ceramic, Red Figure
Findspot
Italy, Campania
Museum
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Accession Number
1970.363
Image Source
boston_mfa
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)