Vases Statuettes of Three Banqueters
Statuettes of Three Banqueters

Statuettes of Three Banqueters

550–525 B.C.
Three men recline, each supporting himself on an elbow, partaking in a symposium or drinking party. All are bearded and bare-chested, with a cloak wrapped around their lower bodies, yet each is distinguished from the others. One holds a _keras_ (drinking horn), another gesticulates as if making a point in the conversation, and a third rubs his belly. The trio probably decorated the rim of a large bronze vessel that might have been used in a symposium for mixing wine and water.

The symposium was a key institution in aristocratic Greek life. Not merely a party in the modern sense of the word, these all-male events often had a strong ritual aspect, indoctrinating and reinforcing the values of society among their participants.
Date
550–525 B.C.
Culture
Greek
Medium
Bronze
Museum
J. Paul Getty Museum
Accession Number
96.AC.77
Image Source
getty_cc0
Images courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art (CC0)