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The Achilles Painter
John H. Oakley,
The College of William and Mary in Virginia
3. Red-Figure Vases
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The earliest vases by the Achilles Painter are red-figure and date to the
460s. Both the style of drawing, compositions and figural types are clearly
derived from the work of the Berlin Painter. Compare, for example, the woman
running right (perhaps Aegina) and looking back toward her pursuer Zeus on a
lekythos in Hamburg
(Hamburg 1983.278),
[4]
with the woman on a lekythos in Cambridge by the Berlin Painter
(Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum 37.28).
[5]
Not only are their poses the same, but the lines for the folds of their short
mantles are almost identical. There are, however, slight differences that
allow one to distinguish between the artists, particularly the short, curving
lines in the gaps between the sets of long parallel lines for the folds of
the lower chiton on the Achilles Painter's vase. But given the close
resemblances, there is no doubt the Achilles Painter learned his craft from
the Berlin Painter.
[4]
Hornbostel 1977, 320-1, no. 273.
[5]ARV2, 211, 205;
CVA, Fitzwilliam 2 (Great Britain 11) RS pl. 13, 2.
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