Advanced Search
Oil flask (lekythos) with woman and servant girl
Greek
Classical Period
about 440 B.C.
Place of Manufacture: Greece, Attica, Athens
Medium/Technique
Ceramic, White Ground
Dimensions
Overall: 38.4 x 13 cm (15 1/8 x 5 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Bartlett Collection—Museum purchase with funds from the Francis Bartlett Donation of 1912
Accession Number13.201
CollectionsAncient Greece and Rome
ClassificationsVessels
During the late sixth century B.C., Athenian artists began to use the white-ground painting technique to decorate special lekythoi, containers that held oil used to anoint the bodies of the dead and were also left as offerings at graves. Until their production diminished at the end of the fourth century B.C., lekythoi of this type were associated almost exclusively with funerals. They often feature scenes of domestic life.
In this simple composition, a specialty of the Achilles Painter, one woman presents another with a chest. These two women are often thought to be mistress and maid, although it is only the smaller size of the girl on the left that suggests they are not social equals; they may instead represent a mother and a daughter. A pitcher and a hair wrap hang in the upper left-hand corner, indicating that the scene is indoors. Since the woman on the right wears a mantle over her yellow tunic, she is probably dressing to go outdoors-perhaps to visit a grave or even to depart from this world. Jewelry from the chest may add the final touches to her outfit.
The rich colors of white-ground lekythoi provide exceptional evidence for ancient Greek monumental painting, which was highly esteemed in antiquity and is almost entirely lost to us today. The flaking away of the color on the left side of this composition, both from the girl's clothing and from the panels of the chest, offers a rare glimpse of the process behind the technique: after white was applied to the body of the vase, the artist made a line drawing and then filled in bright colors, bringing the design to life. These colors, layered atop one another after the vase was fired, were fragile and prone to loss, perhaps used because the vases' funerary function did not require long-lasting materials-a tangible sign of the ancient Greek view of life and death.
In this simple composition, a specialty of the Achilles Painter, one woman presents another with a chest. These two women are often thought to be mistress and maid, although it is only the smaller size of the girl on the left that suggests they are not social equals; they may instead represent a mother and a daughter. A pitcher and a hair wrap hang in the upper left-hand corner, indicating that the scene is indoors. Since the woman on the right wears a mantle over her yellow tunic, she is probably dressing to go outdoors-perhaps to visit a grave or even to depart from this world. Jewelry from the chest may add the final touches to her outfit.
The rich colors of white-ground lekythoi provide exceptional evidence for ancient Greek monumental painting, which was highly esteemed in antiquity and is almost entirely lost to us today. The flaking away of the color on the left side of this composition, both from the girl's clothing and from the panels of the chest, offers a rare glimpse of the process behind the technique: after white was applied to the body of the vase, the artist made a line drawing and then filled in bright colors, bringing the design to life. These colors, layered atop one another after the vase was fired, were fragile and prone to loss, perhaps used because the vases' funerary function did not require long-lasting materials-a tangible sign of the ancient Greek view of life and death.
Catalogue Raisonné
Caskey-Beazley, Attic Vase Paintings (MFA), no. 052; Highlights: Classical Art (MFA), p. 102.
DescriptionThis scene depicts a woman and her servant girl, who approaches her with her jewelry box. The woman on the right is well-attired in a yellow dress (chiton) and deep red mantle (himation). On the left, a girl stands holding a box. She wears a diaphanous sleeveless dress (peplos). In field to left, a hairbag (sakkos) and a pitcher (oinochoë) hang on the wall. Between the figures is the Greek inscription: "Axiopeithes, son of Alkimachos, is handsome" (AXIOPEITHES KALOS ALKIMAXO).
Inscriptions"Axiopeithes, son of Alkimachos, is handsome" (AXIOPEITHES KALOS ALKIMAXO)
The letters placed stoichedon.
ΑΞΙΟΠΕΙΘΗS
ΚΑΛΟS
ΑΛΚΙΜΑΧΟ
The letters placed stoichedon.
ΑΞΙΟΠΕΙΘΗS
ΚΑΛΟS
ΑΛΚΙΜΑΧΟ
ProvenanceSaid to probably be from Gela, Italy. 1911, sold by Tommaso and Ignazio Virzi (dealers), Palermo, to Edward Perry Warren (b. 1860 - d. 1928), London and Rome; 1913, sold by E. P. Warren to the MFA for $18,948.70 [see note]. (Accession Date: January 2, 1913)
NOTE: Total price paid for MFA accession nos. 13.186 - 13.245. Shipped to Warren in 1911 as "White lekythos decorated with black [illeg.]" annotated "Gela probably" (source: private archive). Many thanks to Erin Thompson for facilitating access to this material.
NOTE: Total price paid for MFA accession nos. 13.186 - 13.245. Shipped to Warren in 1911 as "White lekythos decorated with black [illeg.]" annotated "Gela probably" (source: private archive). Many thanks to Erin Thompson for facilitating access to this material.