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Showing posts with the label Magna Graecia

Red-figured fish plates of the 5th century BCE

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Throughout my travels to various museums around the world I have often encountered red-figured fish plates. First developed in Athens, these beautifully detailed serving pieces became especially popular in South Italy and Sicily in the 400s BCE. I stumbled across this excellent video about them and learned that fish plates produced in Magna Graecia were usually more colorful with white accents and the fish are portrayed with their bellies facing inwards towards the small central depression that is thought to have contained dipping sauce like garum. Fish on plates produced in Athens are painted with their bellies facing outwards. I thought this is quite a peculiar style difference.  There also seems to be disagreement among scholars as to whether these plates were actually used in everyday life or produced for funerary purposes only, as almost all of the 1,000 examples that have been recovered came from ancient burials. Art historian Lucas Livingston points out that many of the reco...

Phlyax play

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A Phlyax play, also known as a hilarotragedy, was a burlesque dramatic form that developed in the Greek colonies of Magna Graecia (southern Italy) in the 4th century BCE. Its name derives from the Phlyakes, “Gossip Players,” in Doric Greek. From the surviving titles of the plays they appear to have been a form of mythological burlesque, which mixed figures from the Greek pantheon with the stock characters and situations of Attic New Comedy. The absence of any surviving script has led to conjecture that they were largely improvised.  Although only a few script fragments have been found, fortunately, such plays were a popular subject of vase paintings from the region. The vases first appeared at the end of the 5th century BCE, but most are 4th century BCE. They depict grotesque characters, the masks of comedy, and the props of comic performance such as ladders, baskets, and open windows. These vase paintings indicate that they were performed on a raised wooden stage with an upper gal...

Terracotta loutrophoros (ceremonial funeral vase for water), Tarentine, 340–330 BCE, attributed to the Darius Painter, Apulian, south Italy

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The Tarentine predilection for disciplined yet exuberant embellishment is applied here to an imposing vase with deeply serious iconography. In the primary scene, Persephone and Aphrodite, who both laid claim to the beautiful hunter Adonis, await a judgment from the deity seated between them. He may be interpreted as Zeus or as Hades, ruler of the Underworld. Differing versions of the verdict allowed the hero to divide his time between the goddesses. In the zone below, a youth is isolated between a grave monument and a laver as figures approach from either side. The themes of death and the Underworld are complemented with luxuriant vegetation. The myth of the death and rebirth of Adonis is connected with seasonal change, and the abundant vegetation on this loutrophoros could symbolize rebirth, an appropriate theme for a funeral vase. - Metropolitan Museum of Art Apulian vase painting was the leading South Italian vase painting tradition between 430 and 300 BCE. Of the approximately 20,0...

The many names and faces of Persephone (Proserpina)

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The daughter of Zeus and Demeter, Persephone, often referred to as Kore, became queen of the underworld when she was abducted by Hades.  As a goddess associated with the spring fertility of vegetation, she was worshipped along with her mother Demeter in the rites of the  Eleusinian Mysteries, which promised the initiated a more enjoyable prospect after death.   However her cult was based on ancient agrarian rituals that were practiced around the Mediterranean at Minoan Crete, Egypt, Asia Minor, Sicily, Magna Graecia, and Libya far earlier.  In Minoan Crete, the female vegetation divinity was identified as Ariadne.  Some scholars suggest the name Ariadne was a "friendly" name, derived from the word for "pure," because of a superstitious taboo about speaking the real names of deities associated with the underworld. In another cult on Crete, Persephone was  conflated with Despoina, "the mistress" of a chthonic divinity, who was considered the unnameable d...

Sybolism in Funerary Art: Relief with a Hunter From Magna Graecia

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Made in Taras, South Italy between 290-250 BCE, this Greek relief sculpture was probably once part of a grave monument.  A nude youth, with a horse rearing up behind him, lunges forward to attack an unseen foe.  The presence of the large snarling dog indicates this is a hunting scene and identifies the deceased as a member of the elite.  It also refers to an activity thought to be one of the pleasures of the afterlife.  Photographed at the Getty Villa in Pacific Palisades, California. Funerary relief of a hunter with horse and hunting hound Greek, Taras, South Italy, 290-250 BCE photographed at the Getty Villa in Pacific Palisades, California by Mary Harrsch.

Remains from Prehistoric through Roman times ongoing at the National Archaeological Museum of Sibaritide near Sybaris, Italy

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Remains from Prehistoric through Roman times ongoing at the National Archaeological Museum of Sibaritide near Sybaris, Italy. This museum houses finds from the ancient cities of Sybaris, Thurii and Copia. Some of the most interesting finds were the result of excavations in the archaeological park of Francavilla Marittima, from whose necropolis come grave goods dating back to the Iron Age from the sanctuary of Athena of the 6th  - 4th century BCE including religious figurines and architectural fragments. One of the most important objects in the museum's collection is a bronze table with a dedication to Athena belonging to Kleombrotos son of Dexilaos, winner of a competition at Olympia , dating back to the beginning of the sixth century BCE. Image: Bronze figurines of both Roman and Egyptian deities courtesy of the the National Archaeological Museum of Sibaritide.

Artifacts from South Apulia and Roman finds from Sant'Aloe ongoing at the State Archaeological Museum of Vito Capialbi in Vibo Valentia, Italy

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Artifacts from South Apulia and Roman finds from Sant'Aloe ongoing at the State Archaeological Museum of Vito Capialbi in Vibo Valentia, Italy. This museum located in the Norman-Swabian Castle of Vibo Valentia is divided into four main sections: finds from sacred buildings, artifacts recovered from necropolises, objects from private collections and Roman materials. Corinthian and Attic pottery, basins, helmets, votive statuette s, gold and silver jewelry, architectural fragments and mosaics dating from the late seventh century BCE through the Roman era are on display. Image: A profusion of terracotta votive statues at the State Archaeological Museum of Vito Capialbi in Vibo Valentia, Italy courtesy of Trip Advisor contributor Marc10en.