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- Janiform Oil Vessel (aryballos) with Heads of a Black African Man and a . . .
Janiform Oil Vessel (aryballos) with Heads of a Black African Man and a Greek Woman This two-headed vessel is known as a Janiform vase, an anachronistic term referring to the Roman god of time and duality, Janus, who was usually depicted with two heads—one looking forward and one looking behind
- Janiform kantharos with addorsed heads of a male African and a female Greek
Potters in ancient Athens and elsewhere produced numerous vessels with either single or paired faces Vases of the type shown here are frequently described in modern racial terms as “Black” and “white,” but these concepts were absent in antiquity
- Terracotta vase with janiform heads - Etruscan - Late Classical - The . . .
This Etruscan vase is unique because both heads are made from the same mold but are painted to appear different, one representing a satyr with pointed ears and a beard, the other a Black African man
- IDENTITY AND OTHERNESS: THE CASE OF ATTIC HEAD VASES AND . . . - JSTOR
The second, much smaller group of vases, which is closely related to rhyta and head vases, consists of plastic vases in the shape of a complete figure, a kind of terra-cotta figurine
- 10. 1. 6: Black Figures in Classical Greek Art
This impressive vase can be seen at the Getty Center in the exhibition Beyond the Nile: Egypt and the Classical World It depicts Herakles as he resists Egyptians’ attempts to sacrifice him under the orders of the Egyptian king Bousiris
- Greek pottery | Types, Styles, Facts | Britannica
Greek pottery, the clay vessels of the ancient Greeks, important for their beauty of form and decoration and for their demonstration of changes in Greek pictorial art
- Art Chapter 5 Greek Art Flashcards | Quizlet
Kore (Greek: κόρη "maiden"; plural korai) is the modern term given to a type of free-standing ancient Greek sculpture of the Archaic period depicting female figures, always of a young age
- Ancient Attic Greek Plastic vase in the shape of a Woman’s Head
At the end of the Archaic period and throughout the Classical period, Greek potters produced a number of fascinating sculptural or plastically rendered vases called “head vases,” which took the shape of female heads or the heads of exotic looking foreigners
- Pitcher (Oinochoe) in the Form of a Black African Male Head
Head vases in the form of Black Africans are much less common Besides the use of black gloss for their skin, the faces are often rendered with stereotyped physical features - thick
- Masks of Blackness (Chapter 2) - Untangling Blackness in Greek Antiquity
Chapter 2 offers a visual paradigm for representations of black people in the ancient Greek world It considers fifth-century BCE janiform cups that depict black and brown faces on opposite sides
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