32. Be familiar with amphora, olpe, krater Don’t have to memorize the rest.
33. Artist: Amasis Painter Title: Dionysos with Maenads Medium: Ceramic amphora with black-figure decoration Size: height of amphora 13" (33.3 cm) Date: c. 540 BCE Source/Museum: Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris EXAMPLE OF BLACK FIGURE PAINTING, POTTER WAS AMASIS PAINTER IS UNKNOWN BUT DID A LOT OF PIECES WOMEN OFFERING A GIFT TO THE GODS
34. Artist: Euphronios (painter) and Euxitheos (potter) Title: Death of Sarpedon Ceramic calyx krater with red-figure decoration , 18" high Date: c. 515 BCE, Archaic Period Source/Museum: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York Euphronius best known red figure artist, illustrating a story from the Iliad, Sleep & Death carry dead Trojan warrior from battlefield Balanced composition, rhythm of decorative bands echoing the shape of the body and Hermes, guide to the Underworld Foreshortening … such as Sarpedon’s left leg Flashcard image
Artist: Exekias Title: Achilles and Ajax Playing A Game Medium: Ceramic amphora with black-figure decoration Size: height of amphora 2' (61 cm) Date: c. 540 BCE Source/Museum: Vatican Museums, Rome
Artist: Exekias Title: The Suicide of Ajax Medium: Ceramic amphora with black-figure decoration Size: height of amphora 27" (69 cm) Date: c. 540 BCE Source/Museum: Château-Musée, Boulogne-sur-Mer, France
Artist: Amasis Painter Title: Dionysos with Maenads Medium: Ceramic amphora with black-figure decoration Size: height of amphora 13" (33.3 cm) Date: c. 540 BCE Source/Museum: Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris
Artist: Euphronios (painter) and Euxitheos (potter) Title: Death of Sarpedon Medium: Ceramic calyx krater with red-figure decoration Size: height of krater 18" (45.7 cm) Date: c. 515 BCE Source/Museum: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Artist: Style of the Achilles Painter Title: Woman and Maid Medium: White-ground and black-figure decoration on a lekythos, with additional painting in tempera Size: height of lekythos 15 ⅛" (38.4 cm) Date: c. 450–440 BCE Source/Museum: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Francis Bartlett Donation of 1912 (13.201)