A major source of evidence for ancient Greece is painted pottery. The two most popular decorative styles are black-figure vase painting, practiced in the late 7th and 6th centuries B.C.E., and red-figure vase painting, largely the product of the 5th and 4th centuries B.C.E. DecorationÌýincludedÌýnon-figural designs, as well as scenes with figures and activities from myth and daily life.
The art of vase painting is generally associated with the Ìý(Attica),Ìýbut by the end of the 5th century B.C.E. and increasingly toward the middle of the 4th century B.C.E., Attic vase painters were producing fewer and fewer painted vessels.ÌýA new center of painted vase production arose in workshops in . Up to this point, exporting Attic vases to Italy had been an affluent business. In fact, the majority of Attic Greek vases on display in museums and held in private collectionsÌýwere recovered from tombs in ItalyÌýand more specifically from tombs in Etruria, a region in central Italy.ÌýSouth Italian pottery workshops, however, experienced a dramatic and rapid surge in the 4th century B.C.E. and by about 320 B.C.E., exports of vases from the Greek mainland had largely ceasedÌýand rose to prominence.ÌýSouth Italian vases areÌýkey to our knowledge of everyday life for both GreekÌýand indigenous populations living in Italy and Sicily in the 4th century B.C.E.
In general, we define South ItalianÌývases as red-figure vases produced by Greek and local artisans living and working in South Italy and Sicily from the late 5th to the late 4th century B.C.E. These pots are further categorized by their more . Four major workshops were firmly established by ca. 350 B.C.E. in Apulia, Lucania, Campania, Paestum (also known as Poseidonia), and Sicily. Most vases produced from these workshops remained in use locally and were rarely exported beyond the surrounding Italian regions. Apulian workshops were the largest and the most successful, to judge by the fact that more than one-half of extant South Italian vases come from Apulia.
The most popular shapes for South Italian vasesÌýwere the amphora, the hydria,Ìýthe lekythos, and the krater. Certain shapes, such as the volute krater and the , had fallen out of production in mainland Greece, yet gained significant popularity in South Italy. The in particular was popular in Apulia and could be made very large, reaching to heightsÌýbetween 1 and 1.5 meters.
Characteristic of South Italian vase paintingÌýare innovative compositions and a variety of narrative viewpoints.ÌýThese characteristics areÌýmost commonly seen on vases exhibiting the most popular themes of either funerary ritual or theatrical imitation on larger vessels. An , for example, depicts a funerary scene of a young man and is contemporary to the tombs found in nearby . The young man stands in front of a ritual water basin, with a tomb behind him depicted in the guise of a miniature temple. Apulian decorations tend to be elaborate and ornamental, often with very detailed floral patterns, theatrical masks adding detail to the volute handles, and bird heads, such as swans, decorating handle joins.Ìý
In addition to the popular funerary scenes, South Italian pottery workshops also produced vessels with theatrical scenes and, in particular, scenes taken from the tragedies of the laterÌý5th century B.C.E. Athenian playwrightÌýEuripides, whose works enjoyed unprecedented success during the 4th century B.C.E. Other theatrical scenes depicted burlesqueÌý, which were popular in the region at this time. Phlyax scenes were rendered in typically caricature fashion, showing Ìýand prosthetic phallusesÌýin parodies of popular and well-known heroes from 5th century B.C.E. Athens.Ìý
Smaller vessels, such asÌýpelikai, were decorated with a different set of themes. As on an Apulian pelike in the ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Art Museum's collectionÌý(pictured here),Ìýpopular themesÌýfor these vessels included single female figures in profile or women in the process of adorning themselves in preparation for a wedding ceremony.ÌýThese depictions of women are interesting variations on Ìýand may inform modern viewers aboutÌýlife for women in South Italy and Sicily.Ìý
It is interesting to observe how characteristically GreekÌýthese vessels and their producers were in spite of their South Italian production. TwoÌýprincipal vase painters, known to us because they signed some of their vessels, areÌý. These names suggest that the potters were Greek. What is more, the themes depicted on their signed vessels, and especially the theatrical scenes, are well-understood Greek subjects, which suggests that the painters were well-acquainted with Greek culture. A Ìýformerly in J. Paul Getty Museum in Malibu, for example, shows Europa, a consort of Zeus, riding on the back of a white bull, a critical component of her mythology; a Dionysiac scene adorns the other side.Ìý
This essay was written to accompany aÌýcollection of Greek artifacts at the ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Art Museum.Ìý
References
- A.D. Trendall, "Farce and Tragedy in South Italian Vase-Painting" in eds. Tom Rasmussen and Nigel Spivey,ÌýLooking at Greek VasesÌý(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991): 151-182.
- A.D. Trendall,ÌýRed Figure Vases of South Italy and Sicily, A HandbookÌý(New York: Thames and Hudson, 1989): 7-25
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