Vases Skylla Applique
Skylla Applique

Skylla Applique

about 300–275 B.C.
Although the name Scylla means "puppy" in Greek, this monster was a killer. A predatory creature who personified the terrors of the sea, Scylla had a voice that sounded like a puppy barking. In Greek mythology, she lived on a cliff in the narrow strait that separated Sicily from southern Italy, where she leaned out to snatch passing sailors off their ships and devoured them. The unknown artist has here depicted her as a mermaid-like hybrid creature. Her upper body is human, but two fishy coiling tails ending in dogs' heads form her lower body.
Date
about 300–275 B.C.
Culture
Greek
Dimensions
H: 6.20 cm W: 7.10 cm
Medium
Silver with gilding
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
96.AM.111.2
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)