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Eurytios Krater is the name given to a famous Early Corinthian column krater. The Eurytios krater is dated to about 600 BC. The vase combined the possibilities of the recently invented or introduced styles of black-figure vase painting and polychrome painting in terms of shape and decoration of the vase with a particularly high quality of artsmanship. Found at Cerveteri and now on display in the Louvre, the front of the krater depicts Eurytios feasting Herakles. This scene, after which the vase was named, is unique in Corinthian vase painting. In addition to the painting itself, several of the figures are named by accompanying inscriptions. The back is decorated with a battle scene, possibly from the Trojan War. Below the handles are a kitchen scene and the probably earliest depiction of the suicide of Ajax. The lower frieze depicts herons, animals and a deer hunt. Eurytios Krater Louvre E635 n4.jpg|Front: preparations for the symposion Eurytios Krater Louvre E635 n1.jpg|Front: Iole, Eurytion and Herakles feasting Eurytios Krater Louvre E635 n2.jpg|Front: detail Eurytios Krater Louvre E635 n3.jpg|Front: detail == Bibliography == * Matthias Steinhart: ''Astarita-Krater'', in ''Der Neue Pauly Vol. 4 (1998), Col. 305 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Eurytios Krater」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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