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Terracotta Lekythos Attributed to the Sappho Painter in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, September 2011

Terracotta Lekythos Attributed to the Sappho Painter in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, September 2011
Terracotta lekythos (oil flask)

Attributed to the Sappho Painter

Period: Archaic

Date: ca. 500 B.C.

Culture: Greek, Attic

Medium: Terracotta; black-figure, white-ground

Dimensions: H. 6 13/16 in. (17.3 cm); diameter 2 13/16 in. (7.2 cm)

Classification: Vases

Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1941

Accession Number: 41.162.29

Description:

Helios (the Sun) rises in his quadriga (4-horse chariot); above, Nyx (Night) driving away to the left and Eos (the goddess of dawn) to the right; Herakles offering sacrifice at altar.

The four lekythoi grouped here are all attributed to the same painter and are said to have been found together in a tomb in Attica. Three of them are decorated with subjects that may have seemed especially suitable for funerary offerings because they show figures moving beyond the confines of the known world. This vase shows a scene that must be related to Herakles' journey to the west, outside the ring of ocean that encircled the earth. Traveling in the bowl of the sun, he reached an otherworldly place where he had to kill the monster Geryon, a creature similar to Hades, the god of the underworld. Here Herakles offers a sacrifice to Helios as the sun rises.

Text from: www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/254196

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