The Painter of Vatican 365 is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the third quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from a vase found in Cerveteri (Rome, Vatican A365; BAPD 301601) depicting the Battle of Gods and Giants. Other subjects are chariots, warriors, and Herakles. Mainly a painter of the amphora, findspots for these vases are in Etruria and Cyprus.
Painter of Vatican 365
Pheidippos is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 525-515 BCE who mainly painted bilingual cups (black-figure interior, red-figure exterior). The name is inscribed as painter (“egrapsen”) on an eye-cup from Vulci (London, British Museum E6; BAPD 200378) showing athletes. The painter collaborated with the potter Hischylos (see Hischylos Painter [Red-figure]). Other subjects are warriors, riders, Dionysos, and revelers (“komasts”). The only known findspot is Vulci.
Fidipo
Feidippos (vaasimaalari)
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Pheidippos
Hermogeno
Ερμογένης
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogenes
Hermogénès
Hermégenes
Hermogenes is an Athenian black-figure potter of Little Master cups active ca. 560-540 BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Hermogenes, and it is possible the potter and painter may be one in the same. The potter specialized in lip-cups, many of which depict female heads in outline. Some band-cups are decorated with a warrior on a chariot and may be the work of a seperate painter. Findspots include Italy, Sicily, the Athenian Agora, and Miletos.
Hermogenes (savenvalaja)
Sosias-maalari
The Sosias Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter and part of the Pioneer Group active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from the potter ("epoiesen") who signs as Sosias on a cup from Vulci (Berlin, Antikensammlung F2278; BAPD 200108) showing Achilles and Patroklos on the interior and the introduction of Herakles to Olympus on the exterior. Shapes are stands, plates, and cups. Other scenes include a winged female and a satyr. Another findspot is the Athenian Acropolis.
Sosias Painter
Sosias Painter
Sosias Painter
Sosias-Maler
Sosias-Maler
Sosias Painter
Sosias Painter
Sosias Painter
Sosias Painter
Sosias Painter
Epicteto
Epiktetos is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 520-490 BCE who painted bilingual cups (black-figure interior, red-figure exterior). The name is inscribed on vases as both potter (“epoiesen”) and painter (“egrapsen”). The painter is thought to have decorated vases for the potters Hischylos, Python, Pistoxenos, and the Nikosthenes-Pamphaios workshop. Other shapes are plates, kraters, the askos, oinochoe, and pelike. Scenes include satyrs, centaurs, Herakles and Busiris, the symposion, erotic scenes, athletes, and male revelers (“komasts”). Some findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Etruscan sites (Vulci, Gravisca, Cerveteri, Adria), and a shipwreck off the coast of Gela (Sicily).
Епіктет
Epictet
爱比克泰德
Epiktetos
Epiktetos
Эпіктэт
Epiktetos
Epiktetos
Epiktetos
Epiktetos
Epiktetos
Epiktetos
Epiktet
Epitteto
Эпиктет
スミクロス
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros
Smikros is an Athenian red-figure painter and part of the Pioneer Group active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name is inscribed as painter (“egrapsen”) on several vases. Shapes include the stamnos, pelike, and psykter. Subjects are the symposion, musicians, Dionysos and satyrs, and the Abduction of Thetis by Peleus. Findspots include Etruria (Todi, Cerveteri, Elea) and Athens (Kerameikos).
Esmicros
Σμίκρος
Maler der Pariser Gigantomachie
Maler der Pariser Gigantomachie
Pintor de Paris Gigantomachy
Painter of The Paris Gigantomachy
The Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-460 BCE. The name derives from a cup found at Vulci (Paris, Cabinet de Médailles 573; BAPD 204546) showing the Gigantomachy on the interior and exterior. Shapes are primarily the cup, but also the lekythos, oinochoe, and neck amphora. Subjects include athletes, revelers (“komasts”), centaurs, satyrs, the symposion, and religion. Some findspots include Adria, Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Tarquinia, Cerveteri, Chiusi), Nola, Gela, the Athenian Agora, Tanagra, and Ampurias (Spain).
Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy
malarz Gigantomachii z Paryża
Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy
Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy
Painter of the Paris Gigantomachy
Schuwalow-Maler
Shuvalov Painter
Shuvalov Painter
Shuvalov Painter
Shuvalov Painter
Shuvalov Painter
Shuvalov Painter
Pittore di Shuvalov
Ζωγράφος του Σουβάλωφ
Peintre de Shuvalov
The Shuvalov Painter was an Attic vase painter of the red-figure style, active between 440 and 410 BC, i.e. in the High Classical period (Parthenon period). The Shuvalov painter's conventional name was allocated by John Beazley, who chose for a name vase an amphora that is now at the Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg.
Вазапісец Шувалава
Pintor Shuvalov
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
Anagyrus Painter
The Anagyrus Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter dated to the first quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from the ancient name for Vari (Attica), where many vases have been found. Shapes include the amphora, oinochoe, chalice, and plate. Other findspots include Spata (Attica) and the Athenian Agora.
Anagyrus-Maler
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Lion Painter
Löwen-Maler
The Lion Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 630-600 BCE. On examples of the neck amphora, there are lions, boars, birds, and hybrid creatures. The major findspot is Vari.
Bucci-Maler
Bucci-Maler
Bucci-Maler
Bucci-Maler
The Bucci Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the late 6th c. BCE. The name derives from an amphora formerly in a private collection (now New Orleans, Isaac Delgado Museum of Art 2033 [16.38]; 301635) showing Herakles and Hermes between columns. Mainly a painter of the amphora, subjects include chariots, youths, departures, and Herakles. Findspots are Vulci, Taranto, and Kamiros (Rhodes).
Bucci Painter
Bucci Painter
Bucci Painter
Pintor de Aqueloo
Acheloos Painter
Acheloos Painter
Acheloos Painter
Acheloos-Maler
Akheloos-maalari
Peintre d'Acheloos
The Acheloos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active from the end of the 6th c. BCE who is associated with the Leagros Group. The name derives from an amphora found at Vulci (Berlin, Antikensammlung F1851; BAPD 302396) depicting Herakles and Acheloos. Shapes include the neck amphora, lekythos, and hydria. Subjects are mythological with many featuring Herakles. Findspots include Vulci, Cerveteri, and sites in southern Italy and Sicily.
Acheloos Painter
Acheloos Painter
Вазописец Ахелоя
Acheloos Painter
Acheloos Painter
The Bowdoin-Eye Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 520-500 BCE who painted bilingual cups (black-figure interior, red-figure exterior). The name derives from a cup from Cerveteri (Brunswick, Maine, Bowdoin College 1913.2; BAPD 200369) showing athletes on the exterior and interior. Other subjects are warriors, satyrs and maenads, and revelers (“komasts”). Findspots include sites in Etruria (Vulci, Roselle), the Athenian Acropolis, and Olbia (Black Sea).
Bowdoin-eye Painter
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 550-530 BCE. The name derives from the exaggerated arm gestures of the figures. Like the Affecter, Elbows Out is classified as a mannerist painter. Shapes include band-cups, lip-cups, the skyphos, lekythos, and amphora. Subjects are animals, youths, women, and erotic scenes. Examples have been discovered in the Black Sea, Etruria, Naukratis, and Greece.
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
Elbows Out
The Hermaios Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 520-510 BCE, formerly said to be related to the Severeano Group. The name derives from the potter (“epoiesen”) who signs as Hermaios on several examples. Subjects appearing on the cup interior include Dionysos, revelers (“komasts”), the symposion, athletes, warriors, riders, and Amazons. Findspots are Athens (Agora, unspecified sites), Marion (Cyprus), Etruria (Vulci, Chiusi, Cerveteri), and Naukratis.
Hermaios Painter
The Bonn Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 505-480 BCE. The name derives from a cup (Bonn, Akademisches Kunstmuseum 1644; BAPD 203666) showing centaurs on the exterior and an archer on the interior. The primary shape is the cup. Subjects include the symposion, warriors, Theseus, hunting, and satyrs. Findspots are Vulci, Taranto, Spina, Orvieto, and possibly Chiusi.
Bonn Painter
Painter of Vatican 309
Maler von Vatikan 309
Painter of Vatican 309
Painter of Vatican 309
Painter of Vatican 309
Painter of Vatican 309
Painter of Vatican 309
Painter of Vatican 309
Pintor de Vatican 309
The Painter of Vatican 309 is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the mid-6th c. BCE and is classified as a “companion” to Lydos. The name derives from a neck amphora found in Cerveteri (Rome, Vatican 309; BAPD 300873) featuring animal friezes and a duel. Primarily a painter of the neck amphora, other shapes are plates and column kraters. Subjects include animals, duels, riders, and a few scenes of Herakles and Theseus. Known findspots are Athens, Delos, Etruria, Naukratis, and Histria (Romania).
Peintre du Vatican 309
The Falmouth Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter affiliated with the Komast Group and dated to the 560’s BCE or later. The name derives from a cup formerly in Falmouth, England (BAPD 305012). Shapes include Komast cups depicting male revelers ("komasts"). Most of the findspots are outside of Greece.
Falmouth Painter
The Syriskos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter connected to the Syriskos Group, active ca. 470’s BCE and earlier, who uses white-ground. The name (meaning “Little Syrian”) derives from the signature as potter (“epoiesen”) on an astragalos (knucklebone-shaped vase) (Rome, Villa Giulia 866; BAPD 202749), showing Nike, Eros, and a lion. Shapes are the pelike, rhyton in the shape of a ram’s head, kantharos in the shape of a woman’s head, amphora, krater, alabastron, psykter, hydria, and lekythos. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, the symposion, warriors, athletes, and Theseus and the Minotaur. Some findspots are the Athenian Acropolis, Tanagra, sites in Etruria (Vulci, Tarquinia, Cerveteri, Orvieto), southern Italy, Sicily, Naukratis, and Ampurias (Spain).
Syriskos
Lysippides-maalari
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides Painter
Lysippides-schilder
Lysippides-Maler
Peintre de Lysippidès
The Lysippides Painter is the conventional name Sir John Beazley (1885-1970) applied to the individual who he believed painted the black-figure work of the red-figure painter known as the Andokides Painter (see Andokides Painter [Black-figure]; see Andokides Painter [Red-figure]; see Andokides potter [Black-figure]) (ca. 530-515 BCE). It is still debated as to whether they are two artists with identical style or the same artist working in two techniques. Scholars believe the painter to be a student of Exekias.
Pittore di Lisippide
Paseas (vaasimaalari)
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas (sometimes known as the Cerberus Painter) is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 525-510 BCE. The painter also painted in red-figure (see Paseas [Red-figure]) and usually painted on white-ground. The name derives from a black-figure pinax (plaque) dedicated on the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum Acr. 2583; BAPD 301992), inscribed: “one of the paintings of Paseas.” It belongs to a series dedicated to Athena that feature the goddess, in one instance alongside Herakles. Other findspots are the Athenian Agora, Chiusi, Taranto, Vulci, and Cerveteri.
The Elpinikos Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active in the early 5th c. BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Elpinikos kalos” (“Elpinikos is beautiful”) on several examples. Subjects include Menelaus and Helen, the symposion, and youths. Findspots are sites in Etruria (Orvieto, Vulci, Cerveteri).
Elpinikos Painter
The Leningrad Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-450 BCE and a member of the Mannerist Group. The name derives from an amphora (Type B) discovered in south Russia (St. Petersburg, State Hermitage Museum B2228; BAPD 206561) showing a musician (kitharode) with listeners. Shapes are kraters, the pelike, the amphora in different forms, and hydria. Scenes include Dionysos and followers, worship of Dionysos, a satyr-play, the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), musicians, athletes, warriors, Herakles, centaurs, and Helios. A rare scene of vases being decorated is shown on a hydria from Ruvo (Vicenza, Banca Intesa 2; BAPD 206564). Some findspots are Bologna, Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Corinth, the Athenian Agora, Rheneia (Delos), Camiros (Rhodes), Al Mina, Aspendos (Turkey), and Naukratis.
Leningrad Painter
The Argos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from a stamnos from Cerveteri (Vienna, Kunsthistoriches Museum 3729; BAPD 202608) showing the Death of Argos. Shapes are the pelike and stamnos. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, Triptolemos and Demeter, centaurs, athletes and musicians, and a man leading a camel. Other findspots are Veii and Falerii.
Argos Painter
The Telephos Painter is an Athenian red figure painter active ca. 470-460 BCE. The name derives from a cup found in eastern Etruria (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 98.931; BAPD 205037) showing Telephos at the palace of Agamemnon. The main shape is the cup, but also the phiale, neck amphora, lekythos, and rhyton in the shape of a donkey head. Subjects include the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), satyrs, athletes, warriors, Eos and Tithonos, and the Ilioupersis. Some findspots are Orvieto, Etruria (Vulci, Tarquinia), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Eretria, Athens (Acropolis, unspecified sites), and Camiros (Rhodes).
Telephos Painter
The Kyllenios Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of the Tyrrhenian Group dated ca. 560-550 BCE and a painter of the ovoid neck amphora. The name derives from a vase found in Cerveteri (Berlin, Antikensammlung F1704; BAPD 310014) featuring the Birth of Athena and the inscription: “I am Hermes of Kyllene.” Other subjects are Herakles, centaurs, Amazons, the Kalydonian Boar Hunt, athletes, and the Gigantomachy. The main findspot is Cerveteri.
Kyllenios Painter
Kyllenios Painter
Kyllenios-Maler
Kyllenios-Maler
Kyllenios Painter
Kyllenios Painter
Kyllenios Painter
Kyllenios Painter
Kyllenios Painter
Pintor Cilenio
The Painter of the Birth of Athena is an Athenian red-figure painter active in the first half of the 5th c. BCE. The name derives from a pelike found at Vulci (London, British Museum E410; BAPD 205560) showing the Birth of Athena. Shapes are the pelike and the stamnos. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, gods and goddesses, and funerary scenes. Other findspots are Cerveteri and the Athenian Agora.
Pintor del nacimiento de Atenea
Painter of the Birth of Athena
Painter of the Birth of Athena
Painter of the Birth of Athena
Painter of the Birth of Athena
Maler der Geburt der Athena
Maler der Geburt der Athena
Painter of the Birth of Athena
Painter of The Birth of Athena
Peintre de la naissance d'Athéna
The Pharos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 540-520 BCE. The name derives from vases with scenes of two women sharing a cloak (“pharos”). Frequently painting the lekythos, compositions consist of a central panel on the body of the vase. Findspots include Locri (south Italy), Rhodes, and the Athenian Kerameikos.
Pharos Painter
Pharos Painter
Pharos Painter
Pharos Painter
Pharos Painter
Pharos Painter
Pharos-Maler
Pharos-Maler
Pharos-Maler
Pharos Painter
Providence Painter
Providence Painter
Providence Painter
Providence Painter
Providence Painter
Providence Painter
Providence-Maler
Providence-maalari
Peintre de Providence
Pittore di providence
The Providence Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 475-450 BCE. The name derives from a neck amphora (Providence, Rhode Island School of Design 15.005; BAPD 207352) showing Apollo with a kithara. Other shapes are the Panathenaic amphora, hydria, lebes gamikos, stamnos, lekythos, oinochoe, column krater, and cups. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, other gods and goddesses, the Apotheosis of Herakles, women (domestic activities, pursuit scenes), athletes, warriors, revelers (“komasts”), and a wedding. Some findspots are Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Eretria, Thebes, Ampurias (Spain), and Al Mina.
Pintor de Providence
Λυδός
Lydos (Vasenmaler)
Лидос (вазописец)
Lydos
Lydos
Lydos
Lido
Lydos
Lydos
Lydos
Lydos
Lydos
Лідос
Lido (ceramografo)
Lydos is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 560-540 BCE. The name derives from vases signed as “ho Lydos” (“the Lydian”), such as a dinos from the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum Acr. 607; BAPD 310147) where he is signed as painter ("egrapsen"). Lydos painted a variety of large and small shapes, including the column krater, amphora, hydria, Siana cup, cups of other types, and plates. Scenes include Herakles, Dionysos, Theseus, draped men, and the Trojan War. The vases have been found primarily in Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), southern Italy, Etruscan sites, and Sicily.
Red-line Painter
Red-Line Painter
Red-Line Painter
Rote-Linie-Maler
Rote-Linie-Maler
Red-Line Painter
Red-Line Painter
Red-Line Painter
Red-Line Painter
Rote-Linie-Maler
The Red-Line Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active late 6th to early 5th c. BCE. The name derives from the red bands painted below the main composition. Shapes are the neck amphora, oinochoe, hydria, olpe, and pelike. Scenes include Dionysos and followers, Herakles, chariots, the symposion, and warriors. Findspots are Vulci, Spina, Sicily (Morgantina, Gela, Agrigento, Selinus), the Athenian Agora, Cyrene, and Cyprus.
The Clinic Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-460 BCE. The name derives from an aryballos (Paris, Louvre CA2183; BAPD 210078) showing a medical scene. Shapes are mainly cups, but also the askos, aryballos, stamnos, and oinochoe. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, revelers (“komasts”), Eros, warriors, youths, men, women, Herakles, and the Embassy to Achilles. Findspots are Adria, Spina, Etruria (Vulci, Chiusi, Orvieto), and Nola.
Clinic Painter
The Euergides Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 515-500 BCE. The name derives from the potter ("epoiesen") who signs as Euergides on several examples. Shapes are cups and the alabastron. Subjects include warriors, women, athletes, satyrs and maenads, hunting, Theseus and the Minotaur, Achilles and Ajax, and revelers (“komasts”). The painter also places sphinxes, griffins, and winged horses near the cup handles. A notable example is the cup dedicated on the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum Akr. 2.166; BAPD 200761) showing Athena watching metalworkers. Other findspots are the Athenian Agora, Thasos, Eretria, Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Gravisca), Kerch, and Naukratis.
Euergides Painter
The Salting Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from the previous owner (Walter Salting) of a cup (London, Victoria and Albert Museum C2 496.1910; BAPD 201631) showing an athlete with a discus on the interior. Other scenes include warriors and revelers (“komasts”). Findspots are mainland Greece (Corinth, Atalanti), Etruria, Rome, and Naukratis.
Salting Painter
Nikosthenes-maalari
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes Painter
Nikosthenes-Maler
Peintre de Nicosthénès
The Nikosthenes Painter (also known as the Painter of Sleep and Death) is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from the potter ("epoiesen") who signs as Nikosthenes on several examples (see Nikosthenes [Black-figure]). Shapes are cups, the skyphos, kantharos, pyxis, and neck amphora. Subjects include athletes, satyrs and maenads, revelers (“komasts”), warriors, Herakles, Hermes and cattle, and Odysseus under the ram. Some findspots are Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Gravisca, Orvieto, Tarquinia), Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Naukratis, Clazomenae, Marseille, and Leuke (Black Sea).
Kerameikos-Maler
The Cerameicus Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 600-570 BCE. The name derives from vases found in the Athenian Kerameikos. Shapes include the lekanis, oinochoe, skyphos, and loutrophoros. The decoration focuses on animals with the occasional human. Findspots include Athens, Attica, Samos, Naukratis, and Cumae (Italy).
Ceramicus Painter
Ceramicus Painter
Ceramicus Painter
Ceramicus Painter
Ceramicus Painter
Ceramicus Painter
Ceramicus Painter
Cerameicus Painter
Cerameicus Painter
The Gorgon Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter who was active ca. 600-580 BCE. The name derives from a dinos (Paris, Louvre E874; BAPD 300055) showing Perseus and Gorgons. Other shapes include the oinochoe, lekythos, amphora, and the olpe. In addition to large animals, there are scenes of myth (Herakles, Hermes, centaurs). Findspots are Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Naukratis, Heraion, Vari, and Cortona (Italy).
Gorgon-maalari
Peintre de la Gorgone
Pittore della Gorgone
Pintor de la Gorgona
Gorgo-Maler
Gorgon Painter
Gorgon Painter
Gorgon Painter
Gorgon Painter
Gorgon Painter
Gorgon Painter
Malarz Gorgony
The Fallow Deer Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of the Tyrrhenian Group active ca. 560-545/50 BCE. The name derives from the appearance of deer with white spots on their backs on several examples. The primary shape is the ovoid neck amphora. Subjects are Amazons, Gigantomachy, Herakles, Trojan War, and hunting. Findspots are Vulci and Tarquinia.
Fallow Deer Painter
Painter of Acropolis 606
Painter of Acropolis 606
Peintre de l'Acropole 606
Painter of Acropolis 606
Painter of Acropolis 606
Painter of Acropolis 606
Painter of Acropolis 606
Pintor de la Acrópolis 606
Pittore dell'Acropoli 606
Maler von Akropolis 606
The Painter of Acropolis 606 is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 570-560 BCE. The name derives from a dinos found on the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum Acr. 606 [15116]; BAPD 300754) that displays warriors and battle. Shapes include the column krater, neck amphora, amphora, dinos (lebes), and hydria. Findspots are in Athens and Attica, as well as Odessa (Black Sea), Sicily, and Cyprus.
Apollodoro
Ἀπολλόδωρος
Apollodoros is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active in the late 6th c. BCE. The name derives from the painter (“egrapsen”) who signs as Apollodoros on a fragmentary cup (Rome, Villa Giulia, ex Castle Ashby; BAPD 201006) showing warriors. Other scenes include Dionysos and followers, the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), religion, and Theseus and the Minotaur. Some findspots are sites in Etruria (Cerveteri, Orvieto, Gravisca, Tarquinia, Vulci) and the Athenian Acropolis.
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Apollodoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros
Antidoros in an Athenian black-figure potter of Little Master cups active beginning in the mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Antidoros. Andidoros may have worked with more than one painter. Subjects include Pygmies and cranes, hunting, and chariots. Examples have been found in Taranto.
Pintor de Tithonos
Tithonos-Maler
The Tithonos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 500-480 BCE. The name derives from a neck amphora from Suessula (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 03.816; BAPD 203171) showing Eos and Tithonos. Other shapes are the lekythos and stamnos. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, revelers (“komasts”), warriors, religion, and athletes. Findspots are Eretria, Kydonia (Crete), Adria, Vulci, Nola, Gela, and Syracuse.
Tithonos Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Carpenter Painter
Schreiner-Maler
Pintor del carpintero
The Carpenter Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 515-500 BCE. The name derives from a cup found in Chuisi (London, British Museum E23; BAPD 201642) showing a carpenter on its interior. Though primarily a cup painter, a hydria has been attributed to the same painter. Subjects include revelers (“komasts”), the symposion, youths, Herakles, satyrs, and hunting. Findspots are sites in Etruria (Orvieto, Vulci), and a cup “near” the painter stylistically was found in Corinth.
The Akestorides Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-450 BCE. The name (“Akestorides”) is inscribed on a cup from Aegina (New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art 22.139.72; BAPD 209611) showing a boy playing the lyre. The main shape is the cup. Subjects include satyrs and maenads, revelers (“komasts”), athletes, musicians, and draped figures. Findspots are Vulci, Orvieto, Koropi (Attica), Athens, Aegina, and Kerch.
Akestorides Painter
The P.S. Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter connected to the Syriskos Group, active ca. 470’s BCE and earlier. The name derives from the signature as potter (“Pistoxenos Syriskos epoiesen”) on two vessels (the skyphos) belonging to a private collection in England (Whitby, UK, Mulgrave Castle). Subjects on both sides of one skyphos are women at a fruit tree (BAPD 352513), and on the other skyphos are Theseus and Prokrustes and Theseus and Sinis (BAPD 352514). Findspots are unknown.
PS Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
Harrow Painter
The Harrow Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-460 BCE. The name derives from an oinochoe (Harrow, UK, Harrow School Museum 56; BAPD 202673) showing a boy with a hoop. Other shapes include a wide range of pots: the neck amphora, pelike, stamnos, column krater, and hydria. Subjects include generic scenes (youths, men, women), Dionysos and followers, gods and goddesses, Theseus, Herakles, centaurs, the symposion, and Capture of Silenos. Some findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri), Nola, Falerii, sites in Sicily, Gordion, Kerch, and Bourges (France).
The Goltyr Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of the Tyrrhenian Group dated ca. 565-550 BCE. The name derives from an amphora (Poland, Warsaw Archaeological Museum 142445; BAPD 310103) showing a komos. It is a contraction of two words: “Goluchow”, the former collection in Poland, and “Tyrrhenian”.The primary shape is the ovoid neck amphora. Scenes depict centaurs, Amazons, warriors, hunting, and male revelers ("komasts"). Findspots include Vulci and Cerveteri.
Goltyr-Maler
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Goltyr Painter
Pintor Goltyr
The Hegesiboulos Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from the potter (“epoisen”) who signs as Hegesiboulos on a cup (New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art 07.286.47; BAPD 201603) showing a man and his dog (surrounded by coral-red) on the interior and a symposion and komos on the exterior. A fragment of an unidentified shape from the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum 2.538; BAPD 201604) showing a symposion has been connected to the painter.
Hegesiboulos Painter
Hypsis
Hypsis
Hypsis
Hypsis is an Athenian red-figure painter and part of the Pioneer Group active ca. 510 BCE. The name is inscribed as painter (“egrapsen”) on a hydria from Vulci (Munich, Antikensammlungen 2423; BAPD 200170) showing Amazons. The preferred shape is the hydria. Another subject includes women at a fountain house. The vases have been found at Vulci.
Hipsis
The Guglielmi Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter, or group of painters (Guglielmi Group) associated with the Tyrrhenian Group, active ca. 560-545/50 BCE. The name derives from an amphora formerly in the Guglielmi collection (Rome, Vatican 34526; BAPD 310055) showing Amazons and warriors. Shapes include the ovoid neck amphora and the hydria. Subjects include male revelers ("komasts"), Trojan War battles, Amazons, and centaurs. Vulci is the primary findspot.
Guglielmi Painter
Guglielmi Painter
Guglielmi-Maler
Guglielmi-Maler
Guglielmi-Maler
エクセキアス
Эксекий
Эксекий
Эксекий
Exekias
Exekias
Exekias
Exekias
Exekias
Exekias
Exekias
Exekias
Exékiasz
Exéquias
埃克塞基亚斯
Exèquies
Ексекій
Эксекій
Εξηκίας
Exequias (pintor)
Eksekija
Eksekija
Eksekias
Eksekias
Exekias is an Athenian potter ("epoiesen") and painter ("egrapsen") active from ca. 545-530 BCE. The painter’s work is generally considered to represent the apex of the black-figure technique, characterized by elegant draughtsmanship and intricately detailed ornamentation. Closely associated with Group E, Exekias mainly decorates the amphora, but also the pinax (plaque) and cups. Among his best known works are Ajax and Achilles, Achilles and Penthesilea, the Suicide of Ajax, and Dionysos reclining in a boat in possible reference to a Homeric Hymn. The plaques depict scenes connected to the funeral and perhaps lined the inside of the tomb. Main findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Italy (mostly Etruria), as well as Samos, Miletos, Berezan, and Cyrene.
Exékias
Exékias
Ексекий
Eufronio
Euphronius
欧弗洛尼奥斯
Euphronius
Eufrónio
Euphronios is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 520-505 BCE, who signed as both painter (“egrapsen”) and potter (“epoiesen”). Euphronios is considered a member of the Pioneer Group, along with Euthymides, Phintias, and other vase-painters. Shapes connected to the painter are cups, the calyx krater, stamnos, psykter, and pelike. The cup is the main shape connected to the potter. Scenes include Herakles and Antaios, athletes, the symposion, and Amazons. One of the best known works is a krater formerly in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1972.11.10; BAPD 187) showing the personifications of Sleep (“Hypnos”) and Death (“Thanatos”) carrying Sarpedon from the battlefield at Troy. Some findspots are sites in Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Orvieto, Tarquinia), Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Thasos, and Olbia (Black Sea).
אופרוניוס
エウフロニオス
Еўфроній
Евфроний
Евфроний
Ευφρόνιος
Eufronije
Eufronije
Euphronios
Euphronios
Euphronios
Euphronios
Euphronios
Euphronios
Ефроній
Ефроний
Eufronios
Eufronios
Eufronios
Eufronios
Eufronios
Eufronios
The Dish Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-460 BCE. The name derives from the preference for decorating stemmed dishes. Subjects are youths with lyres, a dancing girl, and a maenad. Findspots are Nola and Santa Maria di Capua.
Dish Painter
Nearchos is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 570-555 BCE who signed as both potter (“epoiesen”) and painter (“egrapsen”). Painting in a miniature style, the artist decorated the kantharos, Little Master cup, plaque (pinax), column krater, and aryballos. Subjects include Herakles, Trojan War, Gigantomachy, Pygmies versus cranes, and Amazons. Findspots include the Athenian Acropolis, Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Vetulonia), Naukratis, Berezan, and Samos (Heraion).
Néarchos
ネアルコス
Nearkhos
Nearchos
Nearchos
Nearchos
Nearco (pintor)
Nearchos
Nearchos
Nearchos
Nearc
Nearco
The Oinanthe Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-450 BCE and a member of the Mannerist Group. The name derives from the inscription “Oinanthe kale” (“Oinanthe is beautiful”) on a hydria found at Vulci (London, British Museum E182; BAPD 206695) showing the Birth of Erichthonios. Other shapes are the column krater, pelike, and hydria. Scenes include Theseus and gods and goddesses. Findspots are Norcia (southern Italy) and Vulci.
Oinanthe Painter
Rycroft-Maler
Pintor de Rycroft
The Rycroft Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the last quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from an amphora (Type A) discovered in Vulci, formerly in the Rycroft collection (Oxford, Ashmolean Museum 1965.118; BAPD 301824), showing Leto on one side and Apollo and Artemis on the other. The painter is thought to be related to the Priam Painter and to Psiax. Shapes include the amphora in different forms, kraters, and the hydria. Scenes are of chariots, Herakles, Dionysos, and the Ransom of Hector. Findspots are sites in Etruria, Sicily, Athens (Agora, Acropolis), and Cyrene.
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Rycroft Painter
Leagros-Gruppe
Εργαστήριο του Λεάγρου
groupe de Leagros
Grupul Leagros
Leagros Group
Gruppo di Leagros
The Leagros Group is a group of black-figure painters active ca. 520-500 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Leagros kalos” (“Leagros is beautiful”) on several vases. Painters identified with the group include the Acheloos Painter, Chiusi Painter, and Daybreak Painter. Also associated are the Antiope Group, Group of Würzburg 210, and Group of Vatican 424. Several hundred vessels are attributed to the group, including shapes like the neck amphora, hydria, lekythos, krater, and Panathenaic amphora. Favorite scenes of the group are Herakles and the Trojan War, as well as Dionysian themes. Findspots are Vulci and other Etruscan sites, southern Italy and Sicily, and the Athenian Agora.
The Painter of Eleusis 767 is an Athenian black-figure painter who worked in the first quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from a tall neck amphora found at Eleusis (Eleusis, Archaeological Museum 767; BAPD 300247) decorated with animals and women. Other findspots are in Athens (Acropolis, Agora).
Painter of Eleusis 767
The Prometheus Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of the Tyrrhenian Group active ca. 570-555 BCE. The name derives from an amphora (Florence, Archaeological Museum 76359; BAPD 310028) showing Herakles freeing Prometheus. Shapes are the neck amphora, hydria, and column krater. Subjects include Herakles/Amazons, Trojan War, and Birth of Athena. Findspots include Etruria, Clazomenae, Cyrene, and the Athenian Agora.
Prometheus Painter
Pittore di Agrigento
Agrigento Painter
Agrigento Painter
Agrigento Painter
Agrigento Painter
Agrigento Painter
Agrigento Painter
Agrigento Painter
The Agrigento Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-440 BCE and a member of the Mannerist Group. The name derives from a calyx krater from Agrigento (Agrigento, Archaeological Museum; BAPD 206657) showing Herakles and Nessos. Other shapes are the column-krater, bell krater, stamnos, pelike, dinos, amphora, and hydria. Scenes include Herakles, Theseus, Dionysos and followers, Amazons, the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), musicians, warriors, and generic males (youths, boys, men). Some findspots are Bologna, Spina, Tarquinia, sites in southern Italy and Sicily, the Athenian Agora, Corinth, Rheneia (Delos), Ampurias (Spain), and Naukratis.
Agrigento-Maler
Peintre d'Agrigente
Myson (vaasimaalari)
Myson
Myson
Myson
Myson
Myson
Myson
Myson
Myson
Myson is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 500-475 BCE. The name derives from signatures as painter (“egrapsen”) and potter (“epoiesen”) on a column krater from the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum Akr. 806; BAPD 202359) showing Athena. Other shapes are the pelike, calyx krater, psykter, and oinochoe. Scenes include revelers (“komasts”), the symposion, athletes, Dionysos and satyrs, Croesus seated on a pyre, Amazons, the Struggle for the Delphic Tripod, and other scenes with Herakles. Some findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri), Orvieto, Falerii, Locri (south Italy), and Kerch.
Misone
Misone
Misón
Nikoxenos-Maler
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
The Nikoxenos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active late 6th to early 5th c. BCE and affiliated with the Leagros Group. The painter also produced black-figure and bilingual vases (see Nikoxenos Painter [black-figure]). The name derives from a Panathenaic amphora from Capua, Italy (Oxford, Mississippi University Museum 1977.3.115; BAPD 202964) with “Nikoxenos kalos” (“Nikoxenos is beautiful”) inscribed on Athena’s shield. Other shapes are the amphora, hydria, and pelike. Subjects include the Death of Priam, Perseus and Medusa, and religion. Findspots are sites in Etruria (Vulci, Tarquinia, Cerveteri), the Athenian Acropolis, Aegina, and Naukratis.
Pintor de Nicóxeno
Taleides-Maler
The Taleides Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active in the second quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter (“epoiesen”) by Taleides. Shapes include the lekythos, oinochoe, and hydria. Subjects are youths, warriors, riders, Theseus and the Minotaur, and Herakles. Known findspots are Italy and Sicily, Berezan, and Greece.
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides Painter
Taleides-maalari
Kiss Painter
The Kiss Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from scenes of a youth and girl embracing. Other subjects are athletes and revelers (“komasts”). Findspots are sites in Etruria (Chiusi, Arezzo).
Kuss-Maler
Kuss-Maler
Kuss-Maler
Kuss-Maler
Pintor del masto
Pentristo de la Mamforma Pokalo
Mastos Painter
The Mastos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 530 BCE. The name derives from a mastos (breast-shaped cup) (Würzburg, Martin von Wagner Museum 391; BAPD 302277). Other shapes are the amphora and hydria. Subjects include Dionysos, Herakles, warriors, and the symposion. Findspots are the Athenian Acropolis and Etruria.
Mastos-Maler
Peintre du Mastos
Bellerophon-Maler
The Bellerophon Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 630-600 BCE. On two examples of the neck amphora, Bellerophon and the chimera are shown, giving the painter its name. Findspots include Vari and Etruria.
Bellerophon Painter
Pittore di Bellerofonte
Bellerophon Painter
Bellerophon Painter
Bellerophon Painter
Bellerophon Painter
Bellerophon Painter
Bellerophon Painter
Bellerophon Painter
Paseas (vaasimaalari)
Paseas (sometimes known as the Cerberus Painter) is an Athenian red-figure vase-painter active ca. 525-510 BCE, who also painted in black-figure (see Paseas [Black-figure]) and usually painted on white-ground. The name derives from a black-figure pinax (plaque) dedicated on the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, Akr. National Museum 1.2583; BAPD 301992), inscribed: “one of the paintings of Paseas.” It belongs to a series of plaques dedicated to Athena that features the goddess. The painter’s red-figure work consists mostly of cups and plates. Other red-figure shapes are the lekythos and alabastron. Findspots include sites in Etruria and the Athenian Acropolis.
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Paseas
Painter of London B 76
Painter of London B 76
Painter of London B 76
Painter of London B 76
Painter of London B 76
Painter of London B 76
Pintor de Londres B 76
The Painter of London B76 is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 580-550 BCE. The name derives from hydria found at Camiros, Rhodes (London, British Museum B76; BAPD 300790) showing Hector (inscribed) next to a frontal chariot. Other shapes include the neck amphora, dinos (lebes), loutrophoros, belly amphora, and column krater. Subjects are Theseus and the Minotaur, Trojan War, and the Kalydonian Boar Hunt. Findspots include Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Eleusis, Cyrene, Taranto, and Vulci.
Peintre de Londres B 76
Maler von London B 76
Pittore di London B 76
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax
Hermonax is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 475-450 BCE. The name derives from the signature as painter (“egrapsen”) on several vases. Shapes are the stamnos, pelike, neck amphora, loutrophoros, oinochoe, lekythos, lekanis, and cups. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, revelers (“komasts”), weddings, warriors, the Death of Orpheus, Zeus and Ganymede, Boreas and Oreithyia, Eros and lovers, and youths and young women. Some findspots are sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Cerveteri, Ampurias (Spain), Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Argos, Brauron, Camiros (Rhodes), and Xanthos (Turkey).
Hermonaks
Hermonaks
Гермонакс
Гермонакс
ヘルモナクス
The Pig Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-450 BCE and a member of the Mannerist Group. The name derives from a pelike (Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum 9.17; BAPD 206456) showing men and pigs. Other shapes are the column-krater, hydria, and neck amphora. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), athletes, and Theseus. Some findspots are the Athenian Agora, Corinth, Olympia, Camiros (Rhodes), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Naukratis, and Kerch.
Pig Painter
The Swing Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 540-520 BCE. The name derives from an amphora (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 98.918; BAPD 301521) showing a woman on a swing. Shapes are different amphora types, including the Panathenaic amphora. Scenes include both myth and everyday life: Herakles, Gigantomachy, centaurs, Amazons, Dionysos, warriors, riders, athletes, and revelers ("komasts"). Many vases have been found in Etruria, as well as Greece, Sicily, Cyrene, and Miletos.
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Swing Painter
Ζωγράφος της Αιώρας
Schaukel-Maler
The Winchester Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 520-500 BCE. The name derives from an eye-cup (Winchester, UK, Winchester College 42; BAPD 200403) showing jumpers on the exterior and a satyr on the interior. Satyrs and athletes appear on other cups. Findspots are Greece and Vulci.
Winchester Painter
Pintor N
Maler N
Painter N is an Athenian black-figure painter connected to the workshop of the potter Nikosthenes and active ca. 540-520 BCE. The Nikosthenic amphora was probably decorated by Painter N as well as the kyathos, cups, and psykter. Decorative subjects include satyrs, Dionysos, warriors, revelers ("komasts"), athletes, riders, and scenes with Athena. Most have been discovered in Etruria.
Painter N
Painter N
Painter N
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Epidromos Painter
Peintre d'Epidromos
The Epidromos Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Epidromos kalos” (“Epidromos is beautiful”) on several cups. Subjects include the symposion, sacrifice, Dionysos and followers, athletes, warriors, and Herakles. Findspots are sites in Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Chiusi) and Spina.
Epidromos-Maler
Ptoon-Maler
Pintor de Ptoon
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
Ptoon Painter
The Ptoon Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 565-555 BCE. The name derives from the column krater discovered in Boeotia (Mt. Ptoon) (Athens, National Museum 1001; BAPD 300776) decorated with animals. Other shapes include the ovoid neck amphora, hydria, and Siana cup. Subjects are warriors, the symposion, draped, males, mythological scenes, and animals. Findspots include Rhodes, Vulci, Sicily, and Tocra.
Duris
Duris
Дуріс
Dúrides
杜里斯
Дурыс
Δούρις
ドゥリス
Дурис
Duride
Douris is an Athenian red-figure painter and potter active ca. 500-460 BCE. The name derives from the signature of Douris as painter (“egrapsen”) on many vases. Shapes are primarily the cup, but also the lekythos, pyxis, neck amphora, psykter, and rhyton in the shape of an animal. Scenes include the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), musicians, warriors, athletes, Dionysos and followers, Herakles, Theseus, Zeus and Ganymede, and the Trojan War. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Chiusi, Cerveteri, Tarquinia), Adria, sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Athens (Agora, Acropolis, Kerameikos), Ampurias (Spain), and Naukratis.
Douris
Douris
Douris
Douris
Douris
Douris
Duris
Duris
Princeton Painter
Princeton Painter
Pintor de Princeton
Peintre de Princeton
Princeton-Maler
The Princeton Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 545-530 BCE and a member of the Princeton Group. The name derives from an amphora with a Panathenaic body found at Nola (Princeton, University Art Museum 169; BAPD 320405) showing a man and a woman in a chariot. Shapes include the belly and neck amphora. Scenes include stock motifs (warriors, draped men) and depictions of Herakles, Theseus, Trojan War scenes, and the Gigantomachy. Large numbers of vases have been found in Vulci, while others come from Greece, Egypt, Cyrene, and Susa (Persia).
Princeton Painter
Princeton Painter
Princeton Painter
Princeton Painter
Princeton Painter
The Palazzolo Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Komast cups affiliated with the Komast Group and dated to the 560’s BCE or later. The name derives from a cup found at Akrai, Sicily (Palazzolo; BAPD 305020). Shapes include the Komast cup, Siana cup, and skyphos. The main subject is male revelers ("komasts") dancing alongside females. Findspots include Athens, Sicily, and Naukratis.
Palazzolo Painter
Skythes is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 520-505 BCE who painted bilingual cups (black-figure with coral red exterior, red-figure interior). The name Skythes (“the Scythian”) is inscribed as painter (“egrapsen”) on several vases. Subjects include Herakles, Theseus, athletes, revelers (“komasts”), Dionysos and followers, and warriors. Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Boeotia, Aegina, and sites in Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Chiusi, Gravisca).
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes
Skythes (vaasimaalari)
Escita
Skythès
Peintre d'Athènes 533
Maler von Athen 533
Maler von Athen 533
Maler von Athen 533
The Painter of Athens 533 is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 575-555 BCE. The name derives from a cup found in Athens (Athens, National Museum 533; BAPD 300611) showing males and animals. Shapes include the cup, lekythos, and Siana cup. The painter may be the first to decorate the inside tondo of the cup. Subjects are dancers, warriors, and animals. Findspots include Turkey (Miletus, Pitane, Gordion), Sicily, Marseilles, and Rhitsona.
Painter of Athens 533
Pintor de Atenas 533
The Oionokles Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Oionokles kalos” (“Oionokles is beautiful”) on several examples. Shapes are the neck amphora, lekythos, loutrophoros, and column krater. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, revelers (“komasts”), warriors, Eos and Tithonos, the Death of Orpheus, Theseus, and musicians. Findspots are Vulci, sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Rheneia (Delos), Anavysos (Attica), and Athens.
Pictor Oeonoclis
Ζωγράφος του Οινοκλή
Oionokles Painter
Oionokles-Maler
Neandros is an Athenian black-figure potter of Little Master cups active in the mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from the signature on cups signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Neandros. Decorating both band-cups and lip-cups, scenes include chariots, men, and Herakles. Findspots are Vulci and Corinth.
Neandros
The Hischylos Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 525-500 BCE. The name derives from the potter ("epoiesen") who signs as Hischylos on several examples. Other than the cup, shapes include the column krater and bell krater. Subjects are warriors and athletes. Findspots are Vulci, Taranto, and the Athenian Acropolis.
Hischylos Painter
Ψίαξ
Псіакс
Psjaks
プシアクス
Псиакс
Psiax is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 525-500 BCE. The painter also works in the red-figure technique (see Psiax [red-figure]) and sometimes paints on white-ground. Formerly known as the Menon Painter, the name Psiax appears alone on black-figure examples, and as painter ("egrapsen") on some red-figure vases. Shapes include the kyathos, amphora, hydria, plates, and the alabastron. Scenes derive from both stock (youths, warriors, women dancing) and myth (Herakles, Dionysos, Amazons). Findspots are sites in Etruria, Xanthos (Turkey), Sicily, and Greece.
Psíax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiaks
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiaks
Psiax
Psiax
Pintor KY
The KY Painter (Komast Y) is an Athenian black-figure painter affiliated with the Komast Group and dated to the 570’s and 560’s BCE. Shapes include the Komast cup, skyphos, lekanis, and column krater. The main subject is male revelers ("komasts"). Komast cups attributed to the painter have been discovered in the Greek mainland and were widely distributed around the Mediterranean and the Black Sea.
Ky Painter
KY Painter
KY-maalari
KY-Maler
Käfig-Maler
Cage Painter
The Cage Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 490-480 BCE. The name derives from a cup from Orvieto (London, British Museum 1901.5-14.1; BAPD 203642) showing a boy holding a bird-cage. Shapes are the cup and pyxis. Subjects include athletes, the symposion, men, and youths. Findspots are Orvieto, Tarquinia, and Chiusi.
Peintre de la Cage
The Madrid Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the last quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from a hydria in Madrid (Madrid, Archaeological Museum 10913; BAPD 301766) showing the Struggle for the Delphic Tripod. Shapes are the hydria, neck amphora, and column krater. Scenes include Ajax and Achilles, Dionysos, and Herakles. Findspots are Vulci and other sites in Etruria, Nola, Syracuse, and Athens.
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
Madrid Painter
マドリードの画家
Madrid-Maler
The Sandal Painter (also known as the Rhitsona Painter) is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 575-555 BCE. The name derives from a lekythos found in Etruria (Bologna, Museo Civico Archeologico PU 204; BAPD 300643) showing one boy hitting another with a sandal. Shapes include the Siana cup, lekythos, and Little Master cup. Subjects are athletes, satyrs, and warriors. Findspots include Attica, the Athenian Agora, Ampurias, Etruria, Rhitsona, Naukratis, and the Black Sea.
Sandal Painter
Saconídes
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides
Sakonides is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active ca. 560-520 BCE. The signature as painter ("egrapsen") appears on several cups, including one cup of Type A from the Athenian Acropolis (Athens, National Museum Acr.; BAPD 301108). Subjects are mostly female heads, but also Herakles, youths, and riders. Other findspots include Etruria, Sicily, Thrace, and Olbia.
Xenokles-Maler
Xenokles-Maler
Pintor de Jenocles
Xenokles Painter
Xenokles Painter
Xenokles Painter
Xenokles Painter
Xenokles Painter
Xenokles Painter
Xenokles Painter
The Xenokles Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active in the mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Xenokles. Shapes include more lip-cups than band-cups and at least one oinochoe. Subjects include the gods, animals, youths, and Herakles. Findspots are in Etruria and southern Italy, Berezan, Miletos, and the Athenian Acropolis.
The Painter of Louvre G265 is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 470-460 BCE. The name derives from a cup found at Vulci (Paris, Louvre G265; BAPD 204532) showing the Deeds of Theseus. Other subjects include religion, warriors, athletes, Dionysos and followers, revelers (“komasts”), and the Death of Orpheus. Findspots are Vulci, Orvieto, and Nola.
Painter of Louvre G 265
The Flying-Angel Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from an amphora found in Capua (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 98.882; BAPD 202711) showing a satyr supporting a child-satyr on his shoulders with outstretched arms (“flying-angel”). Shapes include the amphora (Type C), kraters, pelike, lekythos, and a Panathenaic amphora with revelers (“komasts”). Other subjects are athletes, the symposion, Dionysos and followers, warriors, and Herakles. Some findspots are Cerveteri, Chiusi, Gela, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Rheneia (Delos), Cyrene, and Kerch.
Flying-angel Painter
schilder van de Nicosia-olpè
Pintor de Nicosia Olpe
Painter of the Nicosia Olpe
Painter of the Nicosia Olpe
Painter of the Nicosia Olpe
The Painter of the Nicosia Olpe is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 500 BCE. The name derives from a vase (Nicosia, Cyprus Museum C 809; BAPD 330183) showing a man, woman, and youth. Other shapes are cups, the lekythos, and small amphora. Scenes include chariots, arming, men with spears, riders, Herakles, Theseus and the Minotaur, Birth of Athena, and Ajax and Cassandra. Findspots are Italy, Sicily, Cyrene, Naukratis, and Greece.
Painter of The Nicosia Olpe
Maler der Nikosia-Olpe
Peintre d'Oakeshott
The Oakeshott Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active in the second quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from a cup, formerly in the Oakeshott collection (Oxford, Ashmolean Museum 1972.162; BAPD 350750), showing animals. Shapes are band-cups and some lip-cups. One lip-cup (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts (69.1052; BAPD 210) features figure decoration on the interior. Subjects are Dionysian, and findspots include Samos, Etruria, and Cyrene.
Oakeshott Painter
Oakeshott-Maler
Pintor de Oakeshott
Эдынбургскі вазапісец
Edinburgh-Maler
The Edinburgh Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 500 BCE, who sometimes applies white-ground to black-figure. The name derives from a lekythos (Edinburgh, Royal Scottish Museum L224.379; BAPD 380848) showing the Ransom of Hector. The painter has been connected to the Leagros Group and the Dot-Band Class. The lekythos is the main shape, as well as the amphora and small hydria. Scenes include myths, chariots, warriors, Herakles, Athena, and Dionysos. Findspots are Gela and other sites in Sicily, Athens (Kerameikos, Agora, Acropolis), Etruria and southern Italy, Cyrene, and Xanthos (Turkey).
Malarz Edynburski
Edinburgh Painter
Edinburgh Painter
Pittore di Edimburgo
Edinburgh Painter
Edinburgh Painter
Edinburgh Painter
Единбурзький вазописець
Edinburgh Painter
Edinburgh Painter
Edinburgh Painter
Edinburgh Painter
The Euaion Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 460-440 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Euaion kalos” (“Euaion is beautiful”) on a cup (Paris, Louvre G401; BAPD 209713) showing satyrs and maenads. The main shape is the cup. Other shapes are the skyphos, oinochoe, pyxis, hydria, and calyx krater. Other subjects include the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), athletes, warriors, Boreas and Oreithyia, Atalanta, and Theseus. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Orvieto), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Aleria (Corsica), Athens (Agora, Acropolis, Kerameikos), Le Cayla (France), and Kerch.
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Euaion Painter
Peintre d'Euaion
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios-Maler
The Ambrosios Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 510-500 BCE. The name derives from the appellation “Ambrosios'' inscribed on the interior of a cup (Orvieto, Museo Civico, Faina 62; BAPD 201580) showing warriors and athletes on the exterior and a reveler (“komast”) on the interior. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, Nessos and Deianira, the symposion, Herakles, athletes, fishing, and hunting. Findspots include sites in Etruria (Orvieto, Cerveteri, Vulci, Gravisca), Athens (Acropolis, Agora), and Naukratis.
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Ambrosios Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Pintor de Nicóxeno
Nikoxenos-Maler
The Nikoxenos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter, affiliated with the Leagros Group, active late 6th and early 5th c. BCE. The painter also produced red-figure and bilingual vases (see Nikoxenos Painter [red-figure]). The name derives from a Panathenaic amphora from Capua, Italy (Oxford, Mississippi University Museum 1977.3.115; BAPD 202964) with “Nikoxenos kalos” (“Nikoxenos is beautiful”) inscribed on Athena’s shield. Black-figure shapes include the neck amphora, hydria, and pelike. Scenes are of Dionysos, Athena, Herakles and Amazons, soldiers arming, the fountain-house, Perseus and Medusa, and the Judgment of Paris. Findspots are Etruria, southern Italy, Athens, Marathon, and northern Greece.
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nikoxenos Painter
Nessos-Maler
The Nessos Painter (also called the Nettos Painter) is an Athenian black-figure painter active from ca. 620-600 BCE. The name derives from an amphora found in Athens (Athens, National Museum 1002; BAPD 300025) showing a scene of Herakles fighting the centaur Nessos on the neck. Shapes include large vessels, such as the neck amphora, belly amphora, and skyphos-krater. The painter prefers mythological scenes, large figures, and Corinthian-style filling ornamentation. Findspots include Athens and Attica, Samos, Cyrene, Naukratis, and Cerveteri.
Ζωγράφος του Νέσσου
Nessos Painter
Вазописец Несса
Pittore di Nesso
Nessos Painter
Nessos Painter
Nessos Painter
Nessos Painter
Nettos Painter
Nessos-maalari
Peintre de Nessos
Pintor de Neso
Вазописець Несса
The Centaur Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active in the second quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from a preference for painting centaurs and other equids. Known findspots include the Athenian Agora, Vulci, Berezan, and Cyprus.
Centaur Painter
Klitija
Klitija
Клитий
Клитий
克利提亚斯
Klitias
Klitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Kleitias
Клітій
Clitias
Clítias
Clitias
Kleitias is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 575-550 BCE who signs his name as painter (“egrapsen”). His best-known work is a volute-krater known as the François Vase, which was found in Chuisi (Etruria) and is now in Florence (Archaeological Museum 4209; BAPD 300000).It displays a series of mythological scenes and a large number of inscriptions. Other vases attributed to the painter portray Odysseus, warriors, Amazons, dancing youths, and maidens. Other shapes include the Siana cup, Little Master cup, skyphos, and hydria. Findspots include Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Samos (Heraion), Naukratis, Etruria, and Cyrene.
Eucharides Painter
Eucharides-Maler
The Eucharides Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 500-470 BCE, who also painted in red-figure (see Eucharides Painter [Red-figure]). The name derives from the inscription “Eucharides kalos” (“Eucharides is beautiful”) on a red-figure stamnos (Copenhagen, National Museum 124 BAPD 202230) showing youths, women, and Eros. Shapes are the Panathenaic amphora, hydria, pelike, and neck amphora. Subjects include music, horse races, warriors, Ajax and Achilles, and daily life. Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), Vulci, Nola, Cumae, Samos, Corinth, Kerch, Locris (Greece), and Al Mina.
pittore di Eucharides
Peintre d'Eucharidès
Pintor de Eucárides
The Painter of Boston CA is a black-figure painter active ca. 575-555 BCE. The name derives from a Siana cup from Thebes (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 99.519; BAPD 300620) showing Circe and Acheloos. The main shape is the Siana cup, but a Panathenaic amphora fragment with a runner is also attributed to this artist. Findspots include the Athenian Acropolis, Kavala, Rhodes, southern Italy, and Naukratis.
Бостонський вазописець СА
Бостанскі вазапісец CA
Schilder van Boston CA
Schilder van Boston CA
Бостонский вазописец СА
Maler von Boston CA
Painter of Boston CA
The Scheurleer Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active in the late 6th c. BCE, who also painted bilingual cups (black-figure interior, red-figure exterior). The name derives from a cup in the Scheurleer Collection (Amsterdam, Allard Pierson Museum 997; BAPD 200319) showing athletes. Other subjects include warriors, satyrs, and revelers (“komasts”). Findspots are Vulci, Gravisca, and Olbia (Black Sea).
Scheurleer Painter
The Camel Painter is a black-figure painter active in the mid-6th c. BCE. There is debate about whether the painter is Athenian or Boeotian. The name derives from a skyphos (Munich, Antikensammlungen 2008; BAPD 310291) showing youths with a camel. Other scenes are athletes and Ajax with the body of Achilles. Shapes are the skyphos and cups. Findspots include sites in Boeotia and Miletus.
Camel Painter
Painter of Louvre F6
Painter of Louvre F6
Pintor de Louvre F6
Peintre du Louvre F6
The Painter of the Louvre F6 is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the mid-6th c. BCE and is classified as a “companion” to Lydos. The name derives from a hydria (Pairs, Louvre F6; BAPD 300899) showing Dionysos with maenads and satyrs on the shoulder and a duel on the body. Shapes include the column krater, belly amphora (Type B), and the shouldered hydria. Subjects are gods, warriors, Herakles, centaurs, Theseus, and athletes. Known findspots are in Greece and Italy, as well as Berezan and Cyrene.
Maler von Louvre F 6
Maler von Louvre F 6
The Goluchow Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active in the late 6th c. BCE. The name derives from an olpe from Cerveteri (Warsaw, National Museum 142463, ex Goluchow; BAPD 200045) showing a discus thrower. The other shape is the oinochoe, and scenes are of athletes, a satyr, and musicians. Other findspots are Vulci and Athens.
Goluchow Painter
Kaktus-Maler
Kaktus-Maler
Cactus Painter
Cactus Painter
The Cactus Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter ca. 510-500 BCE. Named for a distinct style of palmette tendrils, this is mainly a painter of the lekythos. Scenes include Herakles, Ajax and Achilles, horsemen, and youths. Findspots are Eretria and Thebes.
Archikles is an Athenian black-figure potter of Little Master cups active in the mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from the signature on cups signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Archikles. A band-cup signed as potter by Archikles and Glaukytes shows the Kalydonian Boar Hunt on one side and Theseus fighting the Minotaur on the other. The main findspot is Vulci.
Archikles
The Siren Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from a stamnos from Vulci (London, British Museum E440; BAPD 202628) showing Odysseus and the Sirens. Shapes are the pelike and stamnos. Subjects include Herakles and Deianira, Perseus and a Gorgon, and the Struggle for the Delphic Tripod. Findspots are Vulci and perhaps Cerveteri.
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Siren Painter
Seireeni-maalari
Pittore delle sirene
Онесим
Онесім
Onesimus
Onesimos is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 505-480 BCE, and associated with the Proto-Panaitian Group. The name derives from a cup found at Vulci signed as painter (“egrapsen”) by Onesimos and as potter (“epoiesen”) by Euphronios (Paris, Louvre G105; BAPD 203218) showing horsemen. The primary shape is the cup (kylix). Other shapes are the skyphos, plate, and pyxis. Subjects include Theseus, Herakles, the Trojan War, the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), athletes, and nude females. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Tarquinia, Chiusi, Orvieto), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), and Naukratis.
Onésimo
Onesimo
Onesimos (vaasimaalari)
Анесім
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
Onesimos
The Boot Painter is an Athenian red figure painter active ca. 470-460 BCE. The name derives from several cups depicting naked women putting on or holding boots. The main shape is the cup, but also the oinochoe. Subjects include men, women, boys, athletes, satyrs, Theseus, and a pyrrhic dancer. Findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Tarquinia, Chiusi), sites in southern Italy, and Ampurias (Spain).
Boot Painter
BMN-Maler
Bmn Painter
Pittore BMN
The BMN Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 550-510 BCE, who worked with the potter Nikosthenes. The acronym derives from “British Museum Nikosthenes” and refers to a neck amphora from Agrigento with Nikosthenes signed as potter ("epoiesen") (London, British Museum B295; BAPD 302838). The painter decorated the amphora and Little Master cups, as well the hydria and oinochoe. Subjects are youths, athletes, warriors, Theseus and the Minotaur, and Herakles. Known findspots are in Etruria, Sicily, and Greece.
Pintor BMN
BMN-schilder
The Nikon Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-450 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Nikon kalos” or “kalos Nikon” (“Nikon is beautiful”) on several examples. Also attributed to the painter is a white-ground lekythos from Eretria (Brussels, Musées Royaux A1019; BAPD 207607) showing a mistress and maid.
Nikon Painter
Peintre de Munich 1410
Maler von München 1410
Painter of Munich 1410
Painter of Munich 1410
Painter of Munich 1410
Pintor de Múnich 1410
The Painter of Munich 1410 is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the third quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from an amphora from Vulci (Munich, Antikensammlungen 1410; BAPD 301593) showing a duel over a fallen warrior. Shapes include several amphora types and the hydria. Scenes include warriors, Amazons, and possibly the wedding of Peleus and Thetis. Known findspots are the Athenian Agora, Vulci, and Orvieto.
Timiades Painter
Timiades Painter
The Timiades Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of the Tyrrhenian Group active ca. 565-550 BCE and prolific painter of the ovoid neck amphora. The name derives from an amphora discovered in Vulci (Boston 98.916; BAPD 310045) showing a Greek warrior, whose name is inscribed “Timiades,” fighting Amazons. Scenes include male revelers ("komasts"), satyrs, erotic scenes, Trojan War, and Herakles/Amazons. Findspots include Etruria, Clazomenae, and Tharros (Sardinia).
Timiades-Maler
Timiades-Maler
Timiades-Maler
Painter of Berlin 1686
Pintor de Berlín 1686
Берлинский вазописец
The Painter of Berlin 1686 is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 550-530 BCE. The name derives from an amphora (Berlin, Antikensammlung F1686; BAPD 320383) portraying a sacrifice to Athena. Other scenes include courting, choral performance, Herakles, and warriors. Findspots are Etruria, Sicily, sites in Greece, Cyrene, and Kerch (Black Sea).
Maler von Berlin 1686
Maler von Berlin 1686
Peintre de Berlin 1686
Painter of Berlin 1686
Painter of Berlin 1686
The Pedieus Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active in the late 6th c. BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Pedieus kalos” (“Pedieus is beautiful”) on several examples. Subjects include Amazons, horsemen, warriors, and women. Findspots are Thebes, Athens, Camiros (Rhodes), and sites in Etruria (Cerveteri, Tarquinia, Gravisca).
Pedieus Painter
Pedieus Painter
Pedieus Painter
Pedieus Painter
Pedieus Painter
Pittore di Pedieus
Pedieus Painter
Pedieus Painter
Pedieus-Maler
Peintre de Pédieus
The Medea Group decorated vases in the black-figure technique in Athens in the late 500s B.C.
Medea Group
The Geras Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from a pelike (Paris, Louvre G234; BAPD 202622) showing Herakles and Geras (“old age”). Other shapes are the neck amphora, kraters, hydria, and stamnos. Subjects include Dionysos and followers, Ganymede, Theseus, Europa, Aktaion, Triptolemos and Demeter, and Herakles. Findspots are Vulci, Nola, sites in Sicily, and Locris (Greece).
Geras Painter
Peintre de Camtar
Camtar-Maler
Camtar-Maler
The Camtar Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter dated to the mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases in Cambridge (“Cam”) and Tarquinia (“Tar”). The main shape is the ovoid neck amphora. Subjects include Herakles/Amazons and the Arming of Achilles. Findspots include Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Tarquinia), Marseilles, Sardis, and Naukratis.
Camtar Painter
Camtar Painter
Camtar Painter
Camtar Painter
Camtar Painter
Camtar Painter
Pintor de Camtar
Ψίαξ
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Псіакс
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax
Psiax is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 525-500 BCE, who also worked in the black-figure technique (see Psiax [Black-figure]) and sometimes painted on white-ground. Formerly known as the Menon Painter, Psiax signs as painter ("egrapsen") on some red-figure vases or simply as “Psiax” in black-figure. Shapes include cups, the amphora, alabastron, and mastoid. Scenes derive from both stock (youths, warriors, women dancing) and myth (Herakles, Dionysos, Amazons). Findspots include the Athenian Acropolis, sites in Etruria, and Kerch.
Psíax
プシアクス
Psjaks
Psiaks
Psiaks
Псиакс
Tagesanbruchs-Maler
Aamunkoittomaalari
夜明けの画家
Pintor del alba
Daybreak Painter
The Daybreak Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter associated with the Leagros Group, active ca. 520 to 500 BCE. The name derives from a lekythos from Eretria (Athens, National Museum 513; BAPD 302371) showing Helios rising from the sea. Shapes are the lekythos, oinochoe, olpe, and hydria. Other scenes include Odysseus and Circe, Herakles, warriors, the symposion, and Dionysos. Findspots are Rhodes, Etruria, southern Italy, and Sicily.
The Euphiletos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the last quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from an inscription “Euphiletos kalos” (“Euphiletos is beautiful”) on a Panathenaic amphora from Vulci (London, British Museum B134; BAPD 301687) showing a pentathlon. Other shapes include the neck amphora, hydria, belly amphora (Type B), oinochoe, and plaques. Scenes include athletes, chariots, Herakles, Dionysos, and weddings. Findspots are many sites in Etruria, the Athenian Acropolis, and Cyprus.
Вазописец Евфилета
Euphiletos Painter
Euphiletos Painter
Euphiletos Painter
Euphiletos Painter
Euphiletos Painter
Pittore di Euphiletos
Euphiletos Painter
Euphiletos Painter
Eufiletos-maalari
Euphiletos-Maler
Peintre d'Euphilétos
Nikosthenes (savenvalaja)
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nikosthenes
Nicostene
Нікосфен
Никосфен (тăм савăт ăсти)
Nicosthénès
Никосфен (гончар)
Nikosthenes is an Athenian potter active ca. 540-510 BCE. Signing a large number of vases as potter ("epoiesen"), Nikosthenes is associated with Painter N and several other painters. Shapes include the Nikosthenic amphora (based on an Etruscan shape), Nikosthenic pyxis, kyathos-dipper, skyphos, and psykter. Subjects include satyrs, Dionysos, warriors, revelers ("komasts"), athletes, riders, and scenes with Athena. Most examples have been discovered in Etruria.
Painter of the Vatican Mourner
Painter of the Vatican Mourner
The Painter of the Vatican Mourner is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 560-540 BCE, who has been associated with Group E. The name derives from an amphora from Vulci (Rome, Vatican 350; BAPD 310352) featuring a woman mourning over a deceased warrior (perhaps Eos and Memnon). Shapes are mostly the amphora and other large vessels. Scenes are of the Trojan War along with wedding and funerary iconography. Known findspots include Italy, Sicily, Naukratis, and Athens.
Painter of The Vatican Mourner
Maler der Trauernden im Vatikan
Pintor del Vatican Mourner
Painter of the Vatican Mourner
Painter of the Vatican Mourner
The Wraith Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the third quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from the ghost-like style of the figures on the vases. Shapes are cups and the lekythos, and subjects include warriors, riders, Dionysos and followers, and Amazons. Findspots are the Athenian Acropolis, Thasos, Italy, Sicily, and France.
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Wraith Painter
Geister-Maler
Geister-Maler
The Dikaios Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter and part of the Pioneer Group active in the late 6th c. BCE. A few Athenian black-figure vases have also been attributed to this painter. The name derives from the inscription “Dikaios kalos” (“Dikaios is beautiful”) on an amphora decorated with youths and warriors (Paris, Louvre G45; BAPD 200167). Shapes are the hydria, amphora, and krater. Other scenes include the Struggle for the Delphic Tripod, erotic scenes, and dance. Findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Tarquinia, Bologna), the Athenian Acropolis, Xanthos (Turkey), and Agrigento.
Dikaios Painter
The Thalia Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 520-500 BCE that painted a bilingual cup (black-figure interior, red-figure exterior). The name derives from the appellation “Thalia” inscribed on a cup from Vulci (Berlin, Antikensammlung 3251; Florence, Archaeological Museum, 1B49; BAPD 200964) showing an erotic scene. Other subjects include Dionysos and followers, athletes, warriors, and revelers (“komasts”). Findspots are Chiusi and the Athenian Acropolis.
Thalia Painter
The Diosphos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the first half of the 5th c. BCE. The name derives from the inscription “kalos Diosphos” (“Diosphos is beautiful”) on a small neck amphora (Paris, Cabinet des Médailles 219; BAPD 305526) showing the Birth of Dionysos. The Diosphos Painter also worked in white-ground and Six’s technique. Mainly a lekythos painter, other shapes are the neck amphora, alabastron, kyathos, and epinetron. Scenes include representations of myths (Amazons, Herakles, Memnon), chariots, warriors, and Dionysos. Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Kerameikos, Agora), Corinth, Perachora, sites in Italy and Sicily, and Rhodes.
Вазапісец Дыясфос
Pintor de Diosfo
Diosfos-maalari
Diosphos Painter
Diosphos Painter
Diosphos Painter
Diosphos Painter
Diosphos Painter
Diosphos Painter
Peintre de Diosphos
Pittore di Diosphos
ディオスポス
Diosphos-Maler
The Charmides Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-460 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Charmides kalos'' or “kalos Charmides” (“Charmides is beautiful”) on several vases. Shapes include the neck amphora (Nolan amphora) and lekythos. Subjects are Eros, warriors, the Judgement of Paris, Eos and Tithonos, Nike, and satyrs. Findspots are sites in southern Italy and Sicily and the Athenian Agora.
Charmides Painter
Pintor d'Àmasis
Amasis-Maler
Вазописець Амасіса
阿马西斯画家
Pintor de Amasis
Malarz Amasisa
Amasis Painter
Amasis (keramiker)
Amasis Slikar
Amasis Slikar
Amasis Painter
Amasis Painter
Майстар Амасіса
Мастер Амасиса
Amasismaleren
אמאסיס
The Amasis Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 560-515 BCE. The name derives from the potter ("epoiesen") who signs as Amasis. Scholars debate if the painter and potter are one in the same. The painter sometimes combines the full black-figure technique with outline and at times employs a minituristic style. Shapes include different amphora types, lekythos, oinochoe, and alabastron. Subjects are Dionysos and his followers, other gods, draped figures, warriors, and revelers ("komasts"). Main findspots are Vulci and other sites in Etruria, Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), and Naukratis.
アマシスの画家
Amasis
Amasis
Pittore di Amasis
Amasis (potier)
application/vnd.google-apps.spreadsheet
Notable groups derived from the Beazley Archive.
Peintre de Sappho
Вазапісец Сапфо
Sappho-Maler
Sappho-Maler
Sappho Painter
Sappho Painter
Sappho Painter
Sappho Painter
Sappho Painter
Sappho Painter
sappho-maleren
The Sappho Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the late 6th and early 5th c. BCE who uses white-ground with black-figure. The name derives from a hydria (Warsaw, National Museum 142333; BAPD 510) in Six’s technique depicting Sappho (inscribed) playing the lyre. Other shapes are the lekythos, column krater, loutrophoros, epinetron, alabastron, mastos, and plaque. Scenes include chariots, Herakles, Athena, and funerary themes. Findspots are Athens (Agora, Kerameikos, Acropolis), Eleusis, Corinth, Vari, Phaleron, and sites in Italy.
Pelukis Sapfo
Sapfo-maalari
Pintor de Safo
Brygos Painter
Brygos Painter
Brygos Painter
Brygos Painter
布吕戈斯
Malarz Brygosa
peintre de Brygos
Pittore di Brygos
צייר בריגוס
Brygos-Maler
The Brygos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 490-470 BCE who painted in white-ground. The name derives from the potter ("epoiesen") who signs as Brygos and collaborated with the Brygos Painter and other painters. Shapes are the cup (kylix), skyphos, lekythos, kyathos, kantharos in the shape of female heads, rhyton in the shape of animal heads, and kalathos. Subjects include revelers (“komasts”), the symposion, Dionysos and followers, warriors, athletes, Herakles, Zeus and Ganymede, and the Trojan War. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Chiusi, Tarquinia, Cerveteri), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), sites in Attica (Brauron, Eleusis, Menidi), Thebes, Marseilles, and Olbia.
Brygos-maalari
Бриг
ブリュゴスの画家
Вазапісец Брыга
Brigos
Brygosmaleren
Brygos
Βρύγος
Brygos
Brygos
Вазописець Брига
Dokimasia-Maler
Pintor de la Dokimasia
The Dokimasia Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-460 BCE. The name derives from a cup found at Orvieto (Berlin, Antikensammlung 2296; BAPD 204483) showing youths with horses in possible reference to their citizen status (“dokimasia”). Shapes are mainly the cup, but also the krater, stamnos, and skyphos. Scenes include revelers (“komasts”), athletes, warriors, Theseus, hunting, and Dionysos and followers. Some findspots are Adria, Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Cerveteri, Tarquinia, Chiusi), Capua, the Athenian Acropolis, and Delos.
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
Dokimasia Painter
The Epitimos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active in mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Epitimos. Subjects include youths, warriors, and erotic scenes. The main findspot is Vulci.
Epitimos Painter
Theseus-maalari
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus Painter
Theseus-Maler
The Theseus Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active late 6th and early 5th c. BCE who sometimes uses white-ground and Six’s technique. The name derives from the painter’s fondness for the hero Theseus. Primarily a painter of the skyphos and lekythos, other shapes are the oinochoe, loutrophoros, alabastron, and pelike. Scenes include Dionysos, Herakles, warriors, revelers ("komasts"), youths, athletes, and prothesis (laying out the body of the deceased). Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Thasos, Taranto, Rhodes, Delos, and Corinth.
Antifonte
Antifonte
The Antiphon Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 490-470 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Antiphon kalos” (“Antiphon is beautiful”) on a stand from Pomarico (southern Italy) (Berlin, Antikensammlung F2325; BAPD 203436) showing athletes. The cup is the main shape, and subjects include warriors, hunting, Herakles, Theseus, the symposion, and revelers (“komasts”). Findspots are the Athenian Acropolis, Etruria (Orvieto, Vulci, Tarquinia, Cerveteri, Chiusi), and sites in southern Italy.
Antiphon-Maler
Вазапісец Антыфона
Antiphon Painter
Antiphon Painter
Antiphon Painter
Antiphon Painter
Antiphon Painter
Antiphon Painter
Вазописець Антифона
Antiphon
Вазописец Антифона
The C Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 570-560 BCE. The name derives from the “Corinthianizing” style of painting. Shapes are the Siana cup, lekanis, tripod kothon (or pyxis), skyphos, and lekythos. Subjects include dueling warriors, horsemen, the symposion, male revelers ("komasts"), and mythological scenes. Findspots include Athens, Eleusis, Perachora, Corinth, southern Italy, Rhodes, Kavala, and Naukratis.
Pintor C
C Painter
C Painter
C Painter
C Painter
C-Maler
Pittore C
Civico Painter
Civico Painter
Civico Painter
Civico Painter
Civico Painter
Civico-Maler
Civico-Maler
The Civico Painter is an Athenian black-figure Siana cup painter active ca. 575-555 BCE. The name derives from a cup fragment from Orvieto (Museo Civico 597; BAPD 300647) with male figures. Subjects include warriors, Theseus and the Minotaur, and athletes. Findspots include Tocra (Libya), Taranto, Orvieto, and Thebes.
Pintor de Berlín A 34
Maler von Berlin A 34
Painter of Berlin A 34
Painter of Berlin A 34
Peintre de Berlin A 34
The Painter of Berlin A 34 (formerly known as the Woman Painter) is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 630-620 BCE. The name derives from a fragmentary krater found on Aegina (Berlin, Antikensammlung A 34; BAPD 218722) with a procession of women. The painter is among the first attributed artists of Attic black-figure vase-painting. The main shape is the krater. This painter uses a mix of techniques (outline and black-figure) and a variety of motifs, such as zigzags, dot rosettes, black-and-white patterned rays, and animals on a large scale. Findspots include Athens (Kerameikos, Agora), Aegina, and Vourva.
pittore di Eucharides
Peintre d'Eucharidès
Pintor de Eucárides
The Eucharides Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 500-470 BCE who painted in black-figure (see Eucharides Painter [Black-figure]). The name derives from the inscription “Eucharides kalos” (“Eucharides is beautiful”) on a red-figure stamnos (Copenhagen, National Museum 124 BAPD 202230) showing youths, women, and Eros. Shapes are cups, the column krater, calyx krater, hydria, and lekythos. Subjects include youths, Dionysos and satyrs, Danae and Perseus, the symposion, warriors, and religion. Findspots are Eleusis, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Vulci, Spina, Cerveteri, Locri (south Italy), Pompeii, sites in Sicily, Patera (Lycia, Turkey), and Naukratis.
Eucharides-Maler
Eucharides Painter
Вазапісец Поласа
Pintor de Polos
The Polos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 575-565 BCE. The name derives from the cross-hatched crown (“polos”) worn by his female and hybrid figures. Shapes include the lekanis, pyxis, hydria, skyphos, and plate. Findspots include Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Cyrene, Tocra (Libya), Naukratis, and Samos (Heraion).
Peintre du Polos
Polos-Maler
Polos Painter
Polos Painter
Polos Painter
Polos Painter
Polos Painter
Polos Painter
Polos Painter
The Delos Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 520-500 BCE. The name derives from a cup found in Delos (Delos, Archaeological Museum 652; BAPD 201559) showing a satyr and maenad on one side and a fight on the other. Other subjects include Dionysos and Herakles. Other findspots are the Athenian Agora and Gravisca.
Delos Painter
An Athenian white ground vase painter active around 460 B.C.
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Painter of Athens 1826
Pintor de Atenas 1826
エウテュミデス
Еўфімід
Euthymides
Euthymides
Euthymides
Ευθυμίδης
Euthymides
Euthymides
Euthymides
Euthymides
Euthymidès
Eutimides
Eutymides
Евфимид
Eutimide
Eutímides
Eutímides
Евфимид
Евфімід
Euthymides is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 515-500 BCE, who signed as both painter (“egrapsen”) and potter (“epoiesen”). Euthymides is considered a member of the Pioneer Group, along with Euphronios, Phintias, and other vase-painters. One of the best known works is an amphora (Munich, Antikensammlungen 2307; BAPD 200160) featuring revelers (“komasts”) and the inscription “as never Euphronios.” Shapes include different amphora types, the hydria, and cups. Scenes are Dionysos and followers, other gods, athletes, Theseus, Herakles, and the symposion. Some findspots are Vulci and other sites in Etruria, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), sites in Sicily and southern Italy, and Vix (France).
Castellani Painter
Castellani Painter
Castellani Painter
Castellani Painter
Castellani Painter
Castellani Painter
Castellani Painter
The Castellani Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of the Tyrrhenian Group active ca. 560-550/45 BCE. The name derives from an amphora formerly in the Castellani collection (Rome, Villa Giulia 50652; BAPD 310041) showing Amazons on one side and centaurs on the other. The primary shape is the ovoid neck amphora. Vases portray the symposion, Herakles/Amazons, weddings, male revelers ("komasts"), satyrs and maenads, erotic scences, and fights. Findspots include sites in Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Tarquinia).
Peintre de Castellani
Castellani-Maler
Pintor de Castellani
The Dutuit Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 500-480 BCE. The name denotes the former owner of an oinochoe from Nola (Paris, Petit Palais 315; BAPD 203153) showing Artemis with a fawn. Shapes are the amphora, oinochoe, lekythos, and hydria. Scenes include Dionysos and followers, winged goddesses, Herakles, and Hephaistos and Thetis (Arms of Achilles). Findspots are Vulci, Cerveteri, Nola, Sicily, and Olbia.
Dutuit Painter
Pittore di Heidelberg
Heidelberg-Maler
Heidelberg Painter
Heidelberg Painter
Heidelberg Painter
Heidelberg Painter
Heidelberg Painter
Heidelberg Painter
Heidelberg Painter
Pintor de Heidelberg
The Heidelberg Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 560-540 BCE. The name derives from a cup found near Phaleron (Heidelberg, University vi.29; BAPD 300545) showing gods. The main shape is the Siana cup. Subjects include warriors, youths, the symposion, athletes, Herakles, and mythological scenes. Findspots include Thasos (Artemision), Sicily, Miletus, Taranto, Berezan, and Corinth.
Pittore di Phrynos
The Phrynos Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active ca. 560-540 BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Phrynos, and it is uncertain if the painter and potter are the same person. Subjects include the Birth of Athena, Herakles, Bellerophon, Pegasos, and warriors. Findspots are Italy, Egypt, and the Athenian Agora.
Phrynos-Maler
Frynos-maalari
Pintor de Frinos
Phrynos Painter
Phrynos Painter
Phrynos Painter
Phrynos Painter
Phrynos Painter
Phrynos Painter
Phrynos Painter
Sofilos
Sofilos
Sofilo
Sophilos is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 580-570 BCE, who signs vases as both painter (“egrapsen”) and potter (“epoiesen”). The name derives from a signed dinos (London, British Museum 1971.1101.1; BAPD 350099) showing the Marriage of Peleus and Thetis. Shapes include the dinos (or lebes), column krater, lekanis, and amphora. Other subjects include the Kalydonian Boar Hunt, Funeral Games of Patroklos, Helen and Menelaus, Herakles, and centaurs. Findspots include Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), Aegina, Naukratis, Smyrna, Sardis, and Sicily.
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sophilos
Sófilos
Griffin-bird Painter
The Griffin-Bird Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter ca. 575-555 BC who decorated the Siana cup. The name derives from the griffin-birds appearing on several examples. Subjects include animals, youths, and revelers ("komasts"). Findspots include Taranto, Berezan, Corinth, the Athenian Acropolis, Miletus, and Naukratis.
Griffin-Bird Painter
Griffin-Bird Painter
Greifenvogel-Maler
Greifenvogel-Maler
Greifenvogel-Maler
Griffin-Bird Painter
Griffin-Bird Painter
Griffin-Bird Painter
Griffin-Bird Painter
Pintor de Socles
Sokles is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active in the mid-6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed as potter ("epoiesen") by Sokles, and it is possible the potter and painter may be one in the same. Shapes are lip-cups, band-cups, and the kantharos. Subjects include Herakles fighting centaurs, youths, and Trojan War subjects. Findspots include Etruria, Berezan, Daskyleion (Turkey), and Greece.
Sokles-Maler
Sokles-Maler
Sokles Painter
Sokles Painter
Sokles Painter
Sokles Painter
Sokles Painter
Sokles Painter
Sokles Painter
Вазописець Тріптолема
Triptolemos
Мастер Триптолема
Pittore di Trittolemo
Triptolemos Painter
Triptolemos Painter
Triptolemos Painter
Triptolemos Painter
Triptolemos Painter
Triptolemos Painter
Triptolemos Painter
Pintor de Triptólemo
The Triptolemos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter (and perhaps potter) active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from a stamnos found at Vulci (Paris, Louvre G187; BAPD 203793) showing Triptolemos, Demeter, and Persephone on one side. Shapes are kraters, the stamnos, amphora, oinochoe, pelike, hydria, alabastron, skyphos, and cup (kylix). Subjects include athletes, warriors, revelers (“komasts”), the symposion, erotic scenes, religion, Dionysos and followers, musicians, Herakles, and Theseus. Some findspots are Adria, Etruria (Cerveteri, Orvieto, Tarquinia, Vulci), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Rheneia (Delos), and Berezan.
Triptolemos-Maler
Andokides-skilder
アンドキデスの画家
Andokides Painter
Andokides Painter
The Andokides Painter (sometimes referred to as the Lysippides Painter [Red-figure]) is an Athenian black-figure painter active during the second half of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed by Andokides as potter ("epoiesen"). Though known for using the black-figure technique, the painter is also considered the first to regularly work in the red-figure technique after its invention ca. 530-520 BCE (see Andokides Painter [Red-figure]). As a black-figure vase-painter, the artist is best known for bilingual vases (decorated with the same scene on both sides, one in red-figure and the other in black-figure). It remains unclear whether the bilingual vases were painted by a single artist or by two. Shapes are mainly the amphora and cups, and scenes are mythological (Ajax and Achilles, Herakles, Dionysos). Findspots are Vulci, Orvieto, other sites in Italy, and the Athenian Acropolis.
Вазописець Андокіда
Andokides-maalari
Andokides Painter (black-figure)
Pittore di Andocide
Andokidész
Peintre d'Andokidès
Անդոկիդես
Malarz Andokidesa
Andokides-Maler
Андокид
Андокид
Андокід
Pintor de Andokides
Andócides
安多基德斯
Andokides-schilder
Andokides-maleren
Ανδοκίδης
Priamos-Maler
Pittore di Priamo
Pintor de Príamo
Priam Painter
Priam Painter
Priam Painter
Priam Painter
Priam Painter
Priam Painter
Priam Painter
The Priam Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the last quarter of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from a hydria discovered in Etruria (Madrid, Archaeological Museum 10920; BAPD 301795) showing Priam beside a chariot. Shapes are the amphora in different forms and the hydria. Scenes include chariots, Herakles, Dionysos, battles, and hoplites. Findspots are sites in Etruria and Sicily.
The Pithos Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active at the end of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from the storage vessel (pithos) represented in several scenes. Subjects include youths, satyrs, warriors, archers, athletes, and the symposion. Findspots are Athens (Agora, Acropolis), Camiros (Rhodes), Chios, Rhitsona, Perachora, Delos, Olynthos, Adria, Gela, Naukratis, Al Mina, sites in Israel, Olbia, and the River Thames (Reading, UK).
Pithos-Maler
Pithos-Maler
Pithos Painter
Pithos Painter
Marathon-Maler
Marathon-Maler
Marathon-Maler
The Marathon Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter connected with the Class of Athens 581 and active in the early 5th c. BCE. A lekythos painter, the name derives from vessels deposited with the Athenian dead after the Battle of Marathon. Scenes are chariots, Dionysos, Herakles, and Athena. Findspots other than Marathon are Sicily, Thebes, Olympia, Rhodes, and southern Italy.
Marathon Painter
Marathon Painter
Marathon Painter
Marathon Painter
Marathon Painter
Fintias
Fintias
Фінтій
Финтий
Фінтый
ピンティアス
Phintias is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 525-510 BCE, who signed as both painter (“egrapsen”) and potter (“epoiesen”). Along with Euthymides, Euphronios, and other vase-painters, Phintias is considered a member of the Pioneer Group. Shapes connected to the painter include both cups and large vessels, like the hydria, amphora (Type A), and krater. Smaller shapes connected to the potter are the cup and the cockle-shell aryballos. Scenes include the symposion, fountain-house, and athletes. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Populonia, Orvieto, Tarquinia), the Athenian Acropolis, and Thasos.
Fincias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Phintias
Φιντίας
Аффектер
Affecter
Affecter
Pittore Affettato
Affecter
Affecter
Affecter
Affecter
Affecter
Affecter
Affecter
L'Affecté
The Affecter is an Athenian black-figure painter (and possibly potter) active ca. 540-520 BCE. The name derives from the mannerist (i.e. affected) style of the figures. Shapes are various amphora types, including ovoid and Type C, as well as smaller shapes. Subjects include stock iconography (draped, men, warriors, riders, dancers) and myth (Herakles, Theseus). Findspots include Etruria, southern Italy, Naukratis, and Greece.
Group E
Group E is a large group of Athenian black-figure painters active ca. 560-540 BCE. The name derives from a close association to Exekias, who signs a Group E vase as potter ("epoiesen"). Group E painted the pelike, different amphora types, the lekythos, and kraters. Subjects include the Birth of Athena, Herakles, Amazons, Theseus and the Minotaur, as well as athletes, the symposion, and funerary scenes. Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), Chalkidike, Vulci, Spina, North Africa, and Russia.
Beldam-Maler
The Beldam Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the second quarter of the 5th c. BCE, who also uses added white and white-ground. The name derives from a lekythos found in Eretria (Athens, National Museum 1129; BAPD 352144) showing satyrs torturing a woman described by Emilie Haspels (1894-1980) as a “beldam.” The main shape is the lekythos of different types, including the “chimney lekythos” and pattern lekythos, the skyphos, alabastron, kantharos, and bell krater. Scenes include Amazons, centaurs, satyrs, and maenads. Findspots are Athens (Kerameikos, Agora) and Attica, Corinth, Eretria, Perachora, Boeotia, Argos, Olympia, sites in Italy and Sicily, Ampurias (Spain), the Black Sea, and Pitane (modern Turkey).
Pintor de Beldam
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Beldam Painter
Pittore di Antimene
Peintre d'Antiménès
Antimenes Painter
Antimenes Painter
Ζωγράφος του Αντιμένη
Antimenes Painter
Antimenes Painter
Antimenes Painter
Antimenes Painter
Pintor de Antimenes
Вазописец Антимена
The Antimenes Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 530-510 BCE. The name derives from the inscription “kalos Antimenes” (“Antimenes is beautiful”) appearing on a hydria from Vulci (Leiden, (Rijksmuseum II167 [PC63]; BAPD 320011) showing men washing in a fountain-house. Shapes are mostly the hydria and neck amphora. The painter has a wide range of mythological scenes, including Herakles, Dionysos, Amazons, Theseus and the Minotaur, and the Gigantomachy, as well as everyday scenes of the fountain-house and olive picking. Most examples have been discovered in Vulci and Tarquinia.
Antimenes-Maler
Antimenes-maalari
Erzgießerei-Maler
Pittore della Fonderia
The Foundry Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from a cup (Berlin, Antikensammlung F2294; BAPD 204340) showing sculptors on the exterior and Hephaistos and Thetis on the interior (Arming of Achilles). The cup is the main shape, and other shapes are the oinochoe and skyphos. Subjects include the symposion, athletes, horsemen, centaurs, Theseus, and the Trojan War. Some findspots are Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Tarquinia, Orvieto, Todi), Adria, sites in southern Italy, and Tanagra.
Pintor de la Fundición
Foundry Painter
Foundry Painter
Foundry Painter
Foundry Painter
Pintor KX
Pittore KX
KX Painter
KX Painter
KX Painter
KX Painter
KX Painter
KX Painter
KX-Maler
Kx Painter
KX-maalari
The KX Painter (Komast X) is an Athenian black-figure painter affiliated with the Komast Group and dated to the 570’s BCE. Shapes are the lekanis, kantharos, and skyphos, but exclude the Komast cup. Subjects include male revelers ("komasts"), animals, and hybrid creatures. Major findspots are Samos (Heraion), Athens (Agora, Kerameikos, Acropolis), and Naukratis.
The Perseus Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-450 BCE, and a member of the Mannerist Group. The name derives from a hydria found at Vulci (Berlin, Antikensammlung F2377; BAPD 206718) showing Athena and Perseus. Other shapes are the pelike, neck amphora, loutrophoros, lebes gamikos, and krater. Scenes include Dionysos and satyrs, other gods and goddesses, herms, and funerary scenes. Findspots are the Athenian Agora, Camiros (Rhodes), Cyrenaica (Libya), sites southern Italy, and Etruria (Vulci, Cortona).
Perseus Painter
The Copenhagen Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter connected to the Syriskos Group, active ca. 470’s BCE and earlier. The name derives from an amphora (Type B) from Vulci (Copenhagen, National Museum 125 [320]; BAPD 202920) showing an African youth with a basket. The Copenhagen Painter’s style is closely related to that of the Syriskos Painter and the two painters are sometimes hard to distinguish. Shapes are the stamnos, pelike, hydria, and krater. Subjects include the Tyrannicides, the Struggle for the Delphic Tripod, Herakles, Theseus and the Minotaur, Medea and Jason, and the symposion. Some findspots are Vulci, Nola, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), and Eleusis.
Copenhagen Painter
Pittore di Haimon
The Haimon Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 490-460 BCE. The name derives from several scenes showing the Sphinx and her victim (Haimon, son of Creon and Eurydice). Many vases apply white-ground or silhouette techniques. The main shape is the lekythos, including the “chimney lekythos,” as well as the skyphos, mastoid cup, oinochoe, hydria, and pyxis. Scenes include chariots, Dionysos and followers, Athena, and Herakles. Findspots are widespread: Athens (Kerameikos, Agora, Acropolis), sites across Greece, Italy and Sicily, Ampurias (Spain), Miletus, Al Mina (north Syria), Cyrene, and the Black Sea.
Haimon Painter
Haimon Painter
Haimon Painter
Haimon Painter
Haimon Painter
Haimon Painter
Haimon Painter
Haimon-Maler
Peintre de Haimon
Pan-maalari
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pan Painter
Pittore di Pan
Pintor de Pan
パンの画家
Вазописец Пана
Вазапісец Пана
The Pan Painter is an Athenian red-figure vase-painter active ca. 490/80-450 BCE and a member of the Mannerist Group. The name derives from a bell krater discovered in Cumae (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 10.185; BAPD 206276 ) showing Pan and a shepherd on one side and the Death of Aktaion on the other. Other shapes are kraters of different types, the amphora in different forms, the pelike, stamnos, lebes gamikos, loutrophoros, hydria, lekythos, alabastron, skyphos, and cups. Scenes include Nike, Dionysos and followers, gods and goddesses, Herakles and Busiris, Eos and Kephalos, Achilles, warriors, revelers (“komasts”), hunting, fishing, and funerary scenes. Some findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora, Kerameikos), Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci), and sites in southern Italy and Sicily.
Pan-Maler
Вазописець Пана
Malarz Pana
Slikar Pana
Slikar Pana
Klitomenes is an Athenian black-figure potter of Little Master cups active in the mid-6th c. BCE. The signature of potter (“epoiesen”) appears on a skyphos found at Sardis (Princeton, University Art Museum 29.180; BAPD 310585), showing a swan in the tondo.
Klitomenes
Chiusi-maalari
Pintor de Chiusi
The Chiusi Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active in the last quarter of the 6th c. BCE who is associated with the Leagros Group. The name derives from an amphora found at Chiusi (Chiusi, National Archaeological Museum 1812; BAPD 302092) showing Ajax and Achilles. Shapes are mainly large vessels, including the amphora, hydria, and column krater. Scenes feature Herakles and Dionysos with followers. Findspots are Etruria, southern Italy, and Athens.
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi Painter
Chiusi-Maler
Pintor de Epelio
Epeleios-Maler
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
Epeleios Painter
The Epeleios Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 515-500 BCE. The name derives from the appellation “Epeleios” inscribed on several vases. Subjects include revelers (“komasts”), sacrifice, satyrs and maenads, athletes, and youths with horses. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Gravisca, Chiusi, Roselle), Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Selinus, and Olbia.
The Troilos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 470-460 BCE who painted using black-figure. The name derives from a hydria from Vulci (London, British Museum 99.7-21.4; BAPD 203082) showing Troilos and Polyxena. Shapes are the amphora, stamnos, pelike, calyx krater, hydria, and lekythos. Subjects include the Struggle for the Delphic Tripod, gods and goddesses, Herakles and Busiris, the Death of Orpheus, the Gigantomachy, and athletes. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri), Orvieto, Nola, and Duvanlij (Thrace).
Troilos Painter
Андокид (гончар)
Andokides
Andokides
Andokides
Андокід
Андокід
Andokides is an Athenian potter active ca. 530 BCE. Signing as potter ("epoiesen") on a number of vases, the potter is associated with several painters: the Andokides Painter, Psiax, and Epiktetos. Shapes are mainly cups, the amphora, and hydria. Subjects include Dionysos, Herakles, and Athena as well as athletes, warriors, and the symposion. Examples have been discovered in Etruria.
Andokides (Töpfer)
Andokides (pottenbakker)
Andokides (keramiker)
アンドキデス
Andocide (ceramista)
Andócides (alfarero)
The Panther Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 620-600 BCE. A painter mainly of the lekanis with animal friezes, Vari (Attica) is the primary findspot.
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Panther Painter
Pintor de la pantera
Panther-Maler
Piraeus Painter
Piraeus Painter
Piraeus Painter
Piraeus Painter
Piraeus Painter
The Piraeus Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 620-600 BCE, who painted the amphora. The name derives from a neck amphora found in Piraeus (Athens, National Museum 353; BAPD 300012) showing chariots. Findspots include Athens and Piraeus.
Pintor del Pireo
Piräus-Maler
Piraeus Painter
Peintre du Pirée
Piraeus Painter
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
Pasiades
The Pasiades Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 520-500 BCE, associated with the Group of the Paidikos Alabastra. The name derives from the potter (“epoiesen”) who signs as Pasiades on several examples. The name Pasiades inscribed as painter (“egrapsen”) on a white lekythos from the Athenian Agora (Athens, Agora Museum AP 422; BAPD 200898) is not considered to be the same artist as the Pasiades Painter. Subjects include Penthesilea, women, and maenads. Known findspots are Attica, Delphi, and Marion (Cyprus).
Пасиад (вазописец)
Пасіад
χαλκιδίζουσα κύλικα
chalkidisierende Schale
Chalcidising Cup
The Chalcidising Cup is a type of cup produced in Athens ca. 520 BCE that copies a shape made in southern Italy. Most feature eyes on the exterior, some with figures (satyrs, Dionysos, warriors), and a gorgoneion in the interior. Their painters are not named. Findspots are in Etruria, the Black Sea, and Attica.
Η κύλικα δεν διαθέτει πόδι και το σώμα συνδέεται απευθείας με μια ψηλή εδαφόχρωμη βάση. Το σχήμα αυτής της κύλικας αναφέρεται ως "χαλκιδίζον", επειδή μιμείται οφθαλμωτές κύλικες που παράγονταν από το μελανόμορφο κεραμικό εργαστήριο που είναι γνωστό ως Χαλκιδικό και αναπτύχθηκε από Έλληνες αποίκους στη Μεγάλη Ελλάδα.
Die Schale hat keinen Stiel und der Gefäßkörper ist direkt auf einem hohen Fuß angebracht. Diese Gefäßform ist eine Sonderform der attischen Augenschale und wird als chalkidisierende Schalen bezeichnet, weil sie von chalkidischen Töpfern in Unteritalien entwickelt wurden.
The Briseis Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from a cup found at Vulci (London, British Museum E76; BAPD 204400) showing Achilles and Briseis. The main shape is the cup, but other shapes are the neck amphora, Panathenaic amphora, column krater, lekythos, alabastron, pyxis, and plate. Subjects include warriors, athletes, Herakles, Dionysos and followers, revelers (“komasts”), and religion. Some findspots are Adria, Etruria (Vulci, Tarquinia, Cerveteri), sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Athens, and Naukratis.
Briseis-Maler
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Briseis Painter
Pictorul lui Briseis
Peintre de Briséis
Pittore di Briseide
Андокід
Andokides-skilder
Pittore di Andocide
Andokides-Maler
Անդոկիդես
Андокид
Андокид
Malarz Andokidesa
Pintor de Andokides
Ανδοκίδης
アンドキデスの画家
Andokides-maleren
The Andokides Painter (sometimes referred to as the Lysippides Painter) is an Athenian red-figure painter active during the second half of the 6th c. BCE. The name derives from vases signed by Andokides as potter ("epoiesen"). Though known for using the black-figure technique, the painter is also considered the first to work regularly in the red-figure technique after its invention ca. 530-520 BCE (see Andokides Painter [Black-figure]; for the potter, see Andokides [Black-figure]; see Lysippides Painter [Black-figure]). As a red-figure vase-painter, the artist is best known for bilingual vases (decorated with the same scene on both sides: one in red-figure and the other in black-figure). It remains unclear whether the bilingual vases were painted by a single artist or by two. Shapes are mainly the amphora and cups, and scenes are mythological (Ajax and Achilles, Herakles, Dionysos). Findspots include Vulci, Orvieto, other sites in Italy, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), and Perachora.
Вазописець Андокіда
Andokides Painter (red-figure)
Andokides Painter
Andokides Painter
Andokides-maalari
Andócides
Andokidész
Peintre d'Andokidès
安多基德斯
Andokides-schilder
The Thaliarchos Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active in the late 6th c. BCE. The name derives from the inscription “Thaliarchos kalos” (“Thaliarchos is beautiful”) on a pyxis lid from Athens (Paris, Petit Palais 382; BAPD 200657) showing a helmet-maker. The pyxis lid is the preferred shape. Other subjects include satyrs, Athena’s head, and a dwarf. Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, unspecified sites), Megara, and Monte Lato (Sicily).
Thaliarchos Painter
The Gales Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 520-500 BCE. The name derives from the signature as potter (“epoiesen”) on several vessels. Shapes are the lekythos and cup. Scenes include the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), a maenad, and a religious procession. Findspots are Gela and Vulci.
Gales Painter
The Matsch Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-470 BCE. The name derives from the former collector of a pelike (Pennsylvania, Private Collection; BAPD 202568) showing a man with a staff and a woman with a basket. Other shapes are the neck amphora and column krater. Subjects include Herakles and Geras (“old age”), Dionysos and followers, and warriors. Findspots are Padula (southern Italy) and Cerveteri.
Matsch Painter
Oltos is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 525-500 BCE that painted bilingual cups (black-figure interior, red-figure exterior). The name is inscribed on vases as both potter (“epoiesen”) and painter (“egrapsen”). The painter is thought to have collaborated with several potters, including Euxitheos and Kachrylion. Shapes are mainly cups, but also the Nikosthenic amphora, stamnos, and psykter. Subjects include gods, Herakles, the Trojan War, Theseus, Dionysos and followers, and warriors riding dolphins. Some findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Orvieto, Chiusi), Athens (Acropolis, Agora), and Naukratis.
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Oltos
Ольтос
Ольтос
Olto
奧特斯
オルトス
Ольтас
The Euaichme Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 480-460 BCE. The name derives from a cup from Vico Equense (Naples) (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 01.8097; BAPD 209665) showing Nestor and Euaichme. The main shapes are cups and the skyphos. Subjects include men, women, youths and boys, athletes, the symposion, and the Marriage of Peleus and Thetis. Findspots are Etruria (Vulci, Cerveteri, Chiusi), Bologna, sites in southern Italy and Sicily, Ampurias (Spain), and Kerch.
Euaichme Painter
The Chelis Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 515-500 BCE. The name derives from the potter (“epoiesen”) who signs as Chelis. Subjects are Dionysos and followers, and the known findspots are in Etruria.
Chelis Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
Colmar Painter
The Colmar Painter is an Athenian red-figure cup painter active ca. 505-480 BCE. The name derives from a cup (Colmar, Musée d’Unterlinden 48; BAPD 203691) showing athletes. The painter also decorated a rhyton in the shape of a donkey’s head. Subjects include athletes, warriors, Herakles, Theseus, the symposion, satyrs, and male revelers (“komasts”). Findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), sites in Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Tarquinia, Chuisi), and Ampurias (Spain).
The Tyszkiewicz Painter is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 490-470 BCE. The name derives from a calyx krater from Vulci formerly in the Tyszkiewicz Collection (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 97.368; BAPD 202631) showing Achilles and Memnon on one side and Diomedes and Aeneas on the other. Shapes are kraters in different forms, the amphora in different forms, the pelike, stamnos, and hydria. Subjects include the Trojan War, Dionysos and followers, the symposion, revelers (“komasts”), Amazons, Theseus, and the Gigantomachy. Some findspots are Etruria (Cerveteri, Vulci, Tarquinia), Spina, Falerii, sites in Sicily, Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Histria (Romania), and Kerch.
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Tyszkiewicz Painter
Makron is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 495-475 BCE. The name derives from a skyphos from Suessula with the signature of Makron as painter (“egrapsen”) and Hieron as potter (“epoiesen”) (Boston, Museum of Fine Arts 13.186; BAPD 204681) showing Paris and Helen on one side and Menelaus and Helen on the other. The main shape is the cup, but also the aryballos, askos, stamnos, oinochoe, plate, and pyxis. Subjects include musicians, revelers (“komasts”), courting, the symposion, Dionysos and followers, a satyr-play, athletes, warriors, centaurs, Herakles, Demeter and Triptolemos, and the Trojan War. Some findspots are Athens (Acropolis, Agora), Etruria (Vulci, Orvieto, Cerveteri, Chiusi, Tarquinia), Adria, sites in southern Italy, and Ampurias (Spain).
Makron
Makron
Makron
Makron
Makron
Макран
Makron
Makron
Makron
Makron
Makron
Macrone
Makron
Makron
Макрон
Макрон
Macron
Black- and red-figure Athenian painters and potters.
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Tleson Painter
Pintor de Tlesón
Tleson painter
Tleson painter
Tleson-maalari
Tleson-Maler
Tleson-Maler
The Tleson Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter of Little Master cups active from ca. 555 to 535 BCE. The name derives from vases signed by the potter “Tleson, son of Nearchos” (“Tleson ho Nearcho epoiesen”), and it is possible that painter and potter are one in the same. Decorated shapes are band-cups and lip-cups, and subjects include animals, Herakles, and Theseus. Findspots are in Vulci and elsewhere in Italy, Sicily, Berezan, Naukratis, and the Athenian Acropolis.
Tleson Painter
Tleson Painter
Tleson Painter
Tleson Painter
Tleson Painter
Gela-maalari
Peintre de Géla
The Gela Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active during the late 6th and early 5th c. BCE, who sometimes applies black-figure to white-ground. The name derives from vases discovered at Gela in southern Sicily. Shapes are the lekythos, olpe, and oinochoe. Scenes are Dionysian, Herakles, the symposion, warriors, and athletes. Many vases have been discovered in the western Greek colonies.
Gela-Maler
Pittore di Gela
Gela Painter
Gela Painter
Gela Painter
Gela Painter
Gela Painter
Gela Painter
Gela Painter
Athena Painter
Athena-Maler
Peintre d'Athéna
The Athena Painter is an Athenian black-figure painter active ca. 490-460 BCE. The name derives from a preference for showing scenes of Athena. A few red-figure vases have been connected to this painter, who is perhaps the same artist as the Bowdoin Painter (see Bowdoin Painter [red-figure]). White-ground vases by the painter or from the painter’s workshop are attributed to the Sèvres Class. The main shapes are the lekythos and oinochoe. Findspots are Eretria, Athens, Olympia, Delphi, Rhodes, Etruria, southern Italy, and Sicily.
Вазописец Афины
Athena Painter
Athena Painter
Athena Painter
Athena Painter
Athena Painter
Athena Painter
Athena Painter
The Painter of Munich 2413 is an Athenian red-figure painter active ca. 460 BCE. The name derives from a stamnos found at Vulci (Munich, Staatliche Antikensammlungen 2413; BAPD 205571) showing the Birth of Erichthonios. An oinochoe from the Athenian Agora (P11810; BAPD 205573) shows actors dressing.
Painter of Munich 2413