Vases Red-figure Krater Red-Figure Column Krater (Mixing Vessel): Apollo a...
Red-Figure Column Krater (Mixing Vessel): Apollo and Goddesses with Chariot (A); Komos (Revel) (B)
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Red-Figure Column Krater (Mixing Vessel): Apollo and Goddesses with Chariot (A); Komos (Revel) (B)

Red-figure Cleveland Painter · Krater · c. 470–460 BCE
Since this column-krater is the most important of 12 vases painted by a Greek artist whose name is unknown, the great English vase expert, Sir John D. Beazley, named him (or her) the Cleveland Painter, after our city. Other vases by the Cleveland Painter are now in New York, Vienna, Paris, and Copenhagen, as well as museums in Greece and Italy. The chariot scene on the main side of the vessel is a divine one, as indicated by the presence of Apollo, identified by his lyre and laurel wreath. With him are three goddesses, probably his sister Artemis (facing him), together with Hera (wearing a crown and holding a scepter and libation dish), and Hebe, the daughter of Zeus and Hera, on her way to meet her future husband, Herakles.
Shape
Technique
Date
c. 470–460 BCE
Culture
Greek, Attic
Attribution
Attributed
Dimensions
H: 56.50 cm
Medium
ceramic
Museum
Cleveland Museum of Art
Accession Number
1930.104
Image Source
cleveland_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)