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Fragment of a Terracotta Skyphos Attributed to the Palermo Painter in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, January 2011


Two fragments of a terracotta skyphos (deep drinking cup)
Attributed to the Palermo Painter
Period: Classical
Date: ca. 420–400 B.C.
Culture: Greek, South Italian, Lucanian
Medium: Terracotta
Dimensions: H. 11 1/2 in. (29.2 cm) diameter 16 in. (40.6 cm)
Classification: Vases
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1912
Accession Number: 12.235.4
Description:
The punishment of Marsyas
Incomplete though it is, this beautiful work illustrates the South Italian predilection for large vases and the ample surface they provide for decoration. The goddess Athena invented the double flutes but rejected them because her face was disfigured when she played them. The satyr Marsyas mastered the instrument and in time challenged the god Apollo to a contest. Marsyas lost and was flayed for his presumption. On one side of the skyphos, Artemis and Leto, sister and mother of Apollo, face the satyr who leans on a pillar inscribed with his name and holds a large knife. The other side preserves much of Athena, with her martial attributes, seated pensively on a rock.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/1300...
Attributed to the Palermo Painter
Period: Classical
Date: ca. 420–400 B.C.
Culture: Greek, South Italian, Lucanian
Medium: Terracotta
Dimensions: H. 11 1/2 in. (29.2 cm) diameter 16 in. (40.6 cm)
Classification: Vases
Credit Line: Rogers Fund, 1912
Accession Number: 12.235.4
Description:
The punishment of Marsyas
Incomplete though it is, this beautiful work illustrates the South Italian predilection for large vases and the ample surface they provide for decoration. The goddess Athena invented the double flutes but rejected them because her face was disfigured when she played them. The satyr Marsyas mastered the instrument and in time challenged the god Apollo to a contest. Marsyas lost and was flayed for his presumption. On one side of the skyphos, Artemis and Leto, sister and mother of Apollo, face the satyr who leans on a pillar inscribed with his name and holds a large knife. The other side preserves much of Athena, with her martial attributes, seated pensively on a rock.
Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Collections/search-the-collections/1300...
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