Information about Red Figure Pottery
Red-figure pottery (Greek, ερυθρόμορφα, erythromorpha) is a style of archaic Greek pottery, later adopted in southern Italy. In the red-figure technique, the background is filled in with black paint and only the figures' details are painted, allowing the unpainted portions of the figures to take on the reddish tone of the Athenian clay after it is burned in the presence of oxygen.
Red-figure pottery, developed around 530 BC by the Andokides Painter, superseded the earlier black-figure pottery, except in the case of Panathenaic Amphorae, because the new process allowed more intricate detail on the ornaments, humans, animals etc. depicted. When developed, it was one of several techniques with which artists experimented. The techniques and conventions of red-figure painting were developed by a group of artists known as the Pioneer Group (among them Euphronios and Euthymides). It became the predominant technique and remained popular until the late 4th century BC.
Red-figure pottery is considered to mark the apex of Greek pottery, and most vases or cups famous today for their skillful painting are in the red-figure style.
The red-figure technique
Creating a finished piece of red-figure pottery required close collaboration between the potter and the painter. The potter would shape the piece out of clay and deliver it to the painter while the clay was still damp. The painter would paint the vase using an instrument like a pastry bag with a syringe action nozzle of bone or wood to lay out the fine detail lines and background colors.Since the paint only developed its color once the piece was fired in a kiln, the painter had to paint almost entirely from memory, unable to see his previous work. Additionally, the colors could only be applied while the clay was still wet, so the painter had to work very quickly. In the large kraters painted with the red-figure technique, this meant that tens of thousands of invisible lines had to be applied, each ending precisely at the right point to prevent overlapping in the intricate detail work, in an extremely short period of time. Despite these constraints, red-figure painters developed an intricate and detailed style.
Painters working in the earlier black-figure technique had been forced to keep their figures well-separated from each other and limit the complexity of their illustration; since all foreground elements were filled with the same black shade, two figures overlapping each other might become indistinguishable. Anatomical detail beyond simple outlining was nearly impossible in the black-figure style, as only a limited number of colors (chiefly, a stark white) would stand out against the black figures.
By contrast, the red-figure technique allowed far greater latitude. Each figure was silhouetted naturally against the black ground, as if illuminated by theatrical lighting, and the more natural red-on-black color scheme, in conjunction with the greater variety of colors that the artist could employ, allowed red-figure painters to depict anatomical details with more accuracy and variety.
The Pioneer Group of painters in particular used the red-figure technique to achieve a naturalism not previously seen in earlier styles. Humans and animals were depicted in naturalistic poses with schematic but accurate anatomy, and techniques of foreshortening and illusionistic perspective were developed to exploit the relative freedom of the red-figure method. This can be seen in Euthymides vase "Three revelers", where three figures twist and turn in a way that black-figure amorpha could have never achieved. Later artists, exploring the limits of the red-figure technique, would reintroduce white as a detail color (all but abandoned with the end of the black-figure style) and even extensive gilding became integrated into the red-figure style.
Red-figure pottery painters
- The Achilles Painter
- The Andokides Painter
- The Berlin Painter
- Douris (vase painter)
- Euphronios
- Euthymides
- The Kleophon Painter
- The Kleophrades Painter
- Oltos
- Phintias
- Polygnotos
See also
References
- Beazley J.D., Attic Red-figure Vase Painters, 3 vols., Oxford, 1963
- Hellenistic Pottery and Terracottas, H.A and D.B. Thompson
External links
- http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/compass/ixbin/hixclient.exe?_IXDB_=compass&_IXSR_=or1&_IXSS_=_IXFPFX_%3dgraphical%252ffull%252f%26_IXNOMATCHES_%3dgraphical%252fno_matches%252ehtml%26%2524%2b%2528with%2bv2_searchable_index%2529%2bsort%3d%252e%26_IXDB_%3dcompass%26%257bUPPER%257d%253av2_free_text_tindex%3dred%252dfigured%26_IXspage%3dsearch%26_IXSESSION_%3dS3X3yjdG2Je%26_IXsearchterm%3dred%252dfigured&_IXFIRST_=11&_IXMAXHITS_=1&_IXSPFX_=graphical/full/&_IXsearchterm=red%2dfigured%26_IXspage=search&submit-button=summary - London: Red-figured water jar
- http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/Pottery.htm - Greek pottery images
Pottery of ancient Greece | |
|---|---|
| Wine Shapes | Krater • Kylix • Oenochoe • Skyphos • Psykter • Kyathos • Rhyton • Kantharos • Askos • Kotyle |
| Perfume Shapes and Wedding Shapes | Lebes Gamikos • Loutrophoros • Epinetron • Alabastron • Aryballos • Lekythos |
| Funerary Shapes and Cultic Shapes | Lekythos • Loutrophoros • Phiale |
| Storage Shapes | Amphora • Lebes • Pithos • Stamnos |
| Techniques | Red-figure • Black-figure • Bilingual pottery • Six's technique |
| Painters | List of Greek Vase Painters• Amasis Painter • Exekias • Pioneer Group • Douris • Meidias Painter |
| Special Topics in Greek Pottery | Typology • Kalos inscription • Symposium • Corpus vasorum antiquorum • John Beazley • Panathenaic Amphorae • South Italian |
Greek may refer to anything related to Greece, including Greek culture and Greek history. It may also refer to:
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- Greek alphabet
- Greek language, or, more specifically:
- Ancient Greek
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Thanks to its hardy nature, pottery bulks large in the archaeological record of Ancient Greece, and because we have so much of it (some 100,000 vases are recorded in the Corpus vasorum antiquorum) it has exerted a disproportionately large influence on our understanding of Greek
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Clay is a naturally occurring material, composed primarily of fine-grained minerals, which show plasticity through a variable range of water content, and which can be hardened when dried or fired.
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2, −1
(neutral oxide)
Electronegativity 3.44 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 1313.9 kJmol−1
2nd: 3388.3 kJmol−1
3rd: 5300.5 kJmol−1
Atomic radius 60 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
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(neutral oxide)
Electronegativity 3.44 (Pauling scale)
Ionization energies
(more) 1st: 1313.9 kJmol−1
2nd: 3388.3 kJmol−1
3rd: 5300.5 kJmol−1
Atomic radius 60 pm
Atomic radius (calc.
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6th century BC - 5th century BC
560s BC 550s BC 540s BC - 530s BC - 520s BC 510s BC 500s BC
539 BC 538 BC 537 BC 536 BC 535 BC
534 BC 533 BC 532 BC 531 BC 530 BC
- - State leaders - Sovereign states
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560s BC 550s BC 540s BC - 530s BC - 520s BC 510s BC 500s BC
539 BC 538 BC 537 BC 536 BC 535 BC
534 BC 533 BC 532 BC 531 BC 530 BC
- - State leaders - Sovereign states
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Events and trends
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The Andokides Painter was an Athenian vase painter, active from 535 to approximately 515. His work is unsigned, he is named therefore after the potter for whom he worked. His importance lies in the fact that he is believed to be the inventor of the red figure style of vase painting.
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black-figure pottery(Greek,'μελανόμορφα,melanomorpha) technique is a style of ancient Greek pottery painting in which the decoration appears as black silhouettes on a red background.
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Panathenaic amphorae were the large ceramic vessels that contained the oil (some 10 gallons, and 60-70 cms high) given as prizes in the Panathenaic Games. This olive oil came from the sacred grove of Athena at Akademia, the amphorae which held it had the distinctive form of tight
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The Pioneer Group were a number of red-figure vase painters working in Kerameikos or the potters' quarter of Athens around the beginning of the 5th century BCE. Characterized by John Boardman as perhaps the first conscious art movement in the western tradition, the group comprised
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Euphronios was a Greek painter and potter of red-figure vases, active in Athens between 520 and 470 BC, the time of the Persian Wars. Very little is known about his life other than what can be derived from the vases he signed (a total of eighteen survive, of which eight bear his
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Euthymides was an Athenian potter and painter of vases, primarily active between 515 and 500 BC. He was a member of the Greek art movement later to be known as "The Pioneers" for their exploration of the new decorative style known as red-figure pottery.
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The 4th century BC started the first day of 400 BC and ended the last day of 301 BC. It is considered part of the Classical era, epoch, or historical period.
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Overview
This century marks the height of Classical Greek civilization in all of its aspects...... Click the link for more information.
The vase (pronounced /veɪs/, /veɪz/, or /vɑz/) is an open container, often used to hold cut flowers.
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pastry bag is used to pipe semi-solid foods by pressing them through a narrow opening at one end, for many purposes including cake decoration. It is filled through a wider opening at the opposite end, rolled or twisted closed, and then squeezed to extrude its contents.
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A syringe nowadays nearly always means a medical syringe, but it can mean any of these:
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- A simple hand-powered piston pump consisting of a plunger that can be pulled and pushed along inside a cylindrical tube (the barrel), which has a small hole on one end, so it can
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Kilns are thermally insulated chambers, or ovens, in which a controlled temperature regimes are produced. They are used to harden, burn or dry materials. Specific uses include:
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- To dry green lumber so that the lumber can be used immediately
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- For the landform crater, see Crater.
A krater (from the Greek verb κεράννυμι, meaning "I mix") was a vase used to mix wine and water.
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silhouette is a view of some object or scene consisting of the outline and a featureless interior. The word is an eponym named after Etienne de Silhouette, a finance minister of Louis XV who in 1759 imposed such harsh economic demands upon the French people that his name became
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The Pioneer Group were a number of red-figure vase painters working in Kerameikos or the potters' quarter of Athens around the beginning of the 5th century BCE. Characterized by John Boardman as perhaps the first conscious art movement in the western tradition, the group comprised
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Views
Graphical projections
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Graphical projections
- Perspective projection
- Parallel projection
- Orthographic projection
- Plan, or floor plan view
- Section
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Gilding is the art of applying metal leaf (most commonly gold or silver leaf) to a surface. This art was known to the ancients. According to Herodotus, the Egyptians were accustomed to gilding wood and metals; and gilding by means of gold plates is frequently mentioned in the Old
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- A history of Greek vase painting (1962) Paolo Enrico Arias, Max Hirmer and B B Shefton
- Greek painted pottery (1972) Robert Manuel Cook Methuen publishing, London
- Looking at Greek vases
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Achilles Painter, working from the 460s to the 420s BC, is the pseudonym of an Attic Greek vase-painter of outstanding quality (see Pottery of Ancient Greece), whose refined figure of Achilles on a red-figure amphora of ca.
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The Andokides Painter was an Athenian vase painter, active from 535 to approximately 515. His work is unsigned, he is named therefore after the potter for whom he worked. His importance lies in the fact that he is believed to be the inventor of the red figure style of vase painting.
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Berlin Painter (working c. 490s–c. 460s BCE) is the pseudonym of an Attic Greek vase-painter who is widely regarded as a rival to the Kleophrades Painter among the most talented vase painters of the early fifth century B.C. (see Pottery of Ancient Greece).
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Douris (in Greek Δοῦρις / Doũris) was an Athenian red-figure vase painter who flourished ca. 500 to 460 BCE.
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Work
He began his career working for the potters Kleophrades and Euphronios, before starting a long collaboration with Python...... Click the link for more information.
Euphronios was a Greek painter and potter of red-figure vases, active in Athens between 520 and 470 BC, the time of the Persian Wars. Very little is known about his life other than what can be derived from the vases he signed (a total of eighteen survive, of which eight bear his
..... Click the link for more information.
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Euthymides was an Athenian potter and painter of vases, primarily active between 515 and 500 BC. He was a member of the Greek art movement later to be known as "The Pioneers" for their exploration of the new decorative style known as red-figure pottery.
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The Kleophon Painter is the name given to an anonymous Athenian vase painter in the red figure style who flourished in the mid-to-late 5th century BCE. He is thus named because one of the works attributed to him bears an inscription in praise of a youth named Kleophon.
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Kleophrades Painter" (or Cleophrades Painter) is the name given to an anonymous Athenian vase painter flourishing between about 505 BCE and 475 BCE, whose work is considered to be amongst the finest of the red figure style.
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