G 57 Southern Italian pottery

Pottery produced in the ancient Greek cities located in Southern Italy and on Sicily possibly imitated Corinthian pottery style. Painters from Attica and Corinth settled there and had their workshops. (So - called East Greek pottery were from all Aegean area of Asia Minor, Rhodes and Kos. Their style influenced vase painting in mainland of Greece).
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Red figure askos/guttus in the form of a satyr Greek, South Italian Late Classical to Early Hellenistic Period; second half of 4th century B.C. Place of Manufacture: Italy, Apulia. The beardless young satyr is grimacing, with knitted brows and deep creases around the mouth and cheeks. Museum of Fine Arts Boston.
Oenochoé grecque décorée d'une ménade (suivante de Bacchus). Ce vase servait à puiser le vin mélange d'eau qui était dans le cratère.
The Five Wares of South Italian Vase Painting | Essay | The Metropolitan Museum of Art | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
The Five Wares of South Italian Vase Painting | Thematic Essay | Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History | The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Amphora with two riding youths (A) and heraldic lions (B). South Italian H570
Amphora with two riding youths (A) and heraldic lions (B). South Italian, c. 550 BC Fired clay, black-figure technique. 29,2 cm
Red-Figure Fish Plate - Octopi, Mullet, Bream, Shellfish.
Asteas-Python Workshop (attrib.), c. 340-30 BC. South Italian. Cleveland Museum of Art.
Thymiaterion Supported by a Statuette of Nike (The J. Paul Getty Museum Collection)
500-475 BC.Thymiaterion Supported by a Statuette of Nike (Getty Museum)Greek (Sicilian)Sicily,Italy(Place Created)Terracotta with white slip&polychromy (red,dark blue, black) Object N.86.AD.681.44.6×20.7×8.8 cm. Nike,the winged goddess of victory,forms the support of this thymiaterion or incense burner.A dove surmounts the openwork lid of the incense bowl.The goddess gestures with her right hand, while pulling her garment to the side with her left.
SpecTech
History Of Macedonia – Sun of Vergina – A Greek symbol
Apulian red-figured volute-krater Attributed to “The Underworld Painter”, ca. 330 – 310 BC, late classical – early Hellenistic period Οn the crater neck the chariots of #Helios and #Selene are depicted, beneath which the fishes symbolize the Ocean in which their daily, or nightly, journeys begin and end.
The Getty Museum
Funerary Vessel, South Italian, from Apulia, 350-325 B.C., terracotta red-figured loutrophoros attributed to the Darius Painter