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Corinthian Pyxis with Animals in the Getty Villa, June 2016

Corinthian Pyxis with Animals in the Getty Villa, June 2016
Title: Corinthian Round-Bodied Pyxis

Artist/Maker: Perhaps by the Chimaera Painter (Greek (Corinthian), active 600 - 575 B.C.)

Culture: Greek (Corinthian)

Place: Greece (Corinth) (Place created)

Date: about 570 B.C.

Medium: Terracotta

Object Number: 88.AE.105

Dimensions: 21.7 × 22.2 cm (8 9/16 × 8 3/4 in.)

Alternate Titles: Cosmetics Container with Animals (Display Title)

Object Type: Pyxis

An animal frieze encircles the body of this Corinthian black-figure pyxis. Real and mythological creatures, including lions, a goat, a bull, and a bearded siren, make up the decoration. Their stylized, sharply outlined bodies rhythmically balance against one another. Rosettes fill the spaces around the animals. Above this, a lotus and palmette chain decorates the shoulder of the vessel. In place of handles, the potter has added mold-made female heads.

The pyxis was a container for perfumed oils and cosmetics. Beginning around 575 B.C., Corinthian potters occasionally added mold-made heads to these vessels. By the early 500s B.C., Corinthian pottery, with its simple and repetitive yet elegant decoration, had completely taken over the pottery market and became widely exported throughout the Mediterranean.


Text from: www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/12945/perhaps-by-the-chimaera-painter-corinthian-round-bodied-pyxis-greek-corinthian-about-570-bc

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