据称作者为画家阿玛西斯饰有女织图及妇人、青年和少女的细颈油瓶

Attributed to the Amasis Painter
ca. 550–530 BCE
Not on view
这只细颈油瓶(希腊语:lekythos)据说与现存于博物馆内的另一只细颈油瓶是一同被发现的,瓶画描绘了一支夜行的婚礼队伍正把新娘带去她丈夫的家里。这两只细颈油瓶可能是结婚赠礼,最终伴随主人一同埋入她的坟墓。这里细致刻画的还有这一时期重要的家务活——织布的场面,并且特别突出了直立织布机。织布机的两侧有妇人在称羊毛、纺线、折布等。这里的场景应该是在住宅内的女室中。

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 标题: 据称作者为画家阿玛西斯饰有女织图及妇人、青年和少女的细颈油瓶
  • 创作日期: 约公元前550–530年
  • 文化: 古希腊,阿蒂卡
  • 材料: 赤陶
  • 尺寸: 高63⁄4 英寸(17.1厘米)
  • 来源信息: 弗莱彻基金,1931年
  • 藏品编号: 31.11.10
  • Curatorial Department: Greek and Roman Art

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Cover Image for 1015. Terracotta lekythos (oil flask)

1015. Terracotta lekythos (oil flask)

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These two small flasks are lekythoi, containers for olive oil. The same artist, the Amasis Painter, decorated both, as well as other ceramic vessels in this case.

The piece on the right shows a wedding procession. The bride sits in a chariot drawn by a donkey. She holds a wreath and pulls her veil forward in a gesture associated with marriage in Greek art. Her bridegroom sits next to her, holding the reins. He has a beard and must be past his first youth. The bride is probably much younger than he is, as was common in ancient Athens.

The procession has almost reached its destination, a brightly painted doorway flanked with columns just under the handle of the vase. This is the bridegroom’s house, the place where the newlyweds are going to live. The bridegroom’s mother is coming out to welcome them, carrying a torch, for Greek wedding processions happened at night.

The wedding was the defining moment in an Athenian girl’s life. The other lekythos shows her most constant occupation, the making of textiles for her family’s use. Here, some women are spinning wool on hand-held spindles. Two shorter figures are working a loom, which textile historians have used to reconstruct Greek weaving techniques.

In ancient Athens, a good weaver was considered an attractive woman and also a good wife. This lekythos seems to link weaving with becoming a wife. Just above the loom on the shoulder of the vessel, you see a seated woman holding out her veil, just like the bride on the other lekythos. The pair of lekythoi might have been a wedding present for an Athenian bride in the sixth century B.C.

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