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Detail of an Amphora with Boxers in the Getty Villa, June 2016


Title: Attic Black-Figure Nikosthenic Amphora with Boxers
Artist/Maker: Attributed to Painter N (Greek (Attic), active 540 - 520 B.C.)
signed by Nikosthenes (Greek (Attic), active Athens, Greece 540 - 510 B.C.)
Culture: Greek (Attic)
Place: Athens, Greece (Place Created)
Date: about 520 B.C.
Medium: Terracotta
Object Number: 68.AE.19
Dimensions: 31 × 19.5 × 18.5 cm (12 3/16 × 7 11/16 × 7 5/16 in.)
Inscription(s): NIKOΣΘENEΣ EΠOIEΣEN ("Nikosthenes made [it]")
Alternate Titles: Storage Jar with Boxers (Display Title)
Department: Antiquities
Classification: Vessels
Object Type: Amphora
On the neck of this black-figure Nikosthenic amphora, two boxers face each other with a tripod between them, presumably the prize in their contest. Lower on the vase, a youth sits between a pair of large eyes, grabbing the eyebrows. Eyes were a popular decoration on Athenian vases, especially from around 530 to 510 B.C., and this is a playful variant on that tradition. They probably had an apotropaic function, warding off evil spirits and bad luck. The youth seemingly speaks the Greek words inscribed in front of him: “Nikosthenes made me,” perhaps a lighthearted touch of humor on the part of the potter. As is true of all other signed Nikosthenic amphorae, this one is attributed to Painter N.
Nikosthenic amphorae have a distinctive shape: a tall, narrow body divided by ridges and wide, flat handles. They were made in only one workshop in Athens, that of the potter Nikosthenes. Their shape copies a form of bucchero or impasto amphora traditionally made by Etruscan potters. In fact, almost all the surviving Nikosthenic amphorae come from one city in Etruria, Cerveteri. The specialized shape was likely produced in Athens for export to that market. The scenes of athletic events and revelry, which often decorate this shape, resemble imagery found in contemporary Etruscan tomb painting and presumably relate to Etruscan funerary ritual.
Text from: www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/6529/attributed-to-painter-n-signed-by-nikosthenes-attic-black-figure-nikosthenic-amphora-with-boxers-greek-attic-about-520-bc
Artist/Maker: Attributed to Painter N (Greek (Attic), active 540 - 520 B.C.)
signed by Nikosthenes (Greek (Attic), active Athens, Greece 540 - 510 B.C.)
Culture: Greek (Attic)
Place: Athens, Greece (Place Created)
Date: about 520 B.C.
Medium: Terracotta
Object Number: 68.AE.19
Dimensions: 31 × 19.5 × 18.5 cm (12 3/16 × 7 11/16 × 7 5/16 in.)
Inscription(s): NIKOΣΘENEΣ EΠOIEΣEN ("Nikosthenes made [it]")
Alternate Titles: Storage Jar with Boxers (Display Title)
Department: Antiquities
Classification: Vessels
Object Type: Amphora
On the neck of this black-figure Nikosthenic amphora, two boxers face each other with a tripod between them, presumably the prize in their contest. Lower on the vase, a youth sits between a pair of large eyes, grabbing the eyebrows. Eyes were a popular decoration on Athenian vases, especially from around 530 to 510 B.C., and this is a playful variant on that tradition. They probably had an apotropaic function, warding off evil spirits and bad luck. The youth seemingly speaks the Greek words inscribed in front of him: “Nikosthenes made me,” perhaps a lighthearted touch of humor on the part of the potter. As is true of all other signed Nikosthenic amphorae, this one is attributed to Painter N.
Nikosthenic amphorae have a distinctive shape: a tall, narrow body divided by ridges and wide, flat handles. They were made in only one workshop in Athens, that of the potter Nikosthenes. Their shape copies a form of bucchero or impasto amphora traditionally made by Etruscan potters. In fact, almost all the surviving Nikosthenic amphorae come from one city in Etruria, Cerveteri. The specialized shape was likely produced in Athens for export to that market. The scenes of athletic events and revelry, which often decorate this shape, resemble imagery found in contemporary Etruscan tomb painting and presumably relate to Etruscan funerary ritual.
Text from: www.getty.edu/art/collection/objects/6529/attributed-to-painter-n-signed-by-nikosthenes-attic-black-figure-nikosthenic-amphora-with-boxers-greek-attic-about-520-bc
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