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Mixing bowl (phlyax krater)
Greek, South Italian
Late Classical Period
about 350 B.C.
Place of Manufacture: Italy, Apulia, Taranto
Medium/Technique
Ceramic, Gnathian Ware
Dimensions
Height: 29.9cm (11 3/4in.)
Diameter: 31.2cm (12 5/16in.)
Weight: 5 lb. (2.27 kg)
Diameter: 31.2cm (12 5/16in.)
Weight: 5 lb. (2.27 kg)
Credit Line
Henry Lillie Pierce Fund
Accession Number00.363
CollectionsEurope, Ancient Greece and Rome
ClassificationsVessels
This krater-a vessel used for mixing and serving wine-features a phlyax actor. The term, used for both the actors themselves and the comedic plays that featured them, probably derives from the Greek verb meaning "to swell," and may refer to the costume worn in these comic farces. As is typical for a phlyax, this actor is heavily padded, wearing a white cloak, a red tunic, yellow sleeves and tights (both meant to imply nudity), and a large, flaccid red phallus. His yellow staff, his white hair, and the gnarled features of his mask are telltale signs of his age. As he runs across a ground line composed of white dots, fruits and cakes spill from his mantle; most likely he has stolen these as a gift for the lone female figure on the opposite side of the vase.
Although fifth- and fourth-century-B.C. playwrights, namely Euripides and Aristophanes, dominate current perceptions about ancient drama, a lively tradition of improvised theater based on stock plotlines and characters flourished in both Greece and southern Italy. The oldest evidence of these plays is fourth-century-B.C. vase paintings such as this one; it appears the plays were not written out until slightly later. Character-driven in the same way as the commedia dell'arte, they were largely unscripted, were performed outdoors, and loosely satirized the themes of daily life.
This actor was painted by a South Italian artist of the Apulian region in the Gnathian technique, which involves layering colored slips atop a uniform base of black. Miniaturized figures such as this one give us a sense of how vibrant larger ancient paintings-also frequently inspired by the theater-would have been.
Although fifth- and fourth-century-B.C. playwrights, namely Euripides and Aristophanes, dominate current perceptions about ancient drama, a lively tradition of improvised theater based on stock plotlines and characters flourished in both Greece and southern Italy. The oldest evidence of these plays is fourth-century-B.C. vase paintings such as this one; it appears the plays were not written out until slightly later. Character-driven in the same way as the commedia dell'arte, they were largely unscripted, were performed outdoors, and loosely satirized the themes of daily life.
This actor was painted by a South Italian artist of the Apulian region in the Gnathian technique, which involves layering colored slips atop a uniform base of black. Miniaturized figures such as this one give us a sense of how vibrant larger ancient paintings-also frequently inspired by the theater-would have been.
Catalogue Raisonné
Vase-Painting in Italy (MFA), no. 108; Highlights: Classical Art (MFA), p. 124.
DescriptionA figure on each side, painted in colors.
Side A. Comic actor as an old man, running to right.
Side B. Woman standing with body nearly full front, and profile to right. Flesh colored white, yellow details. Drapery in incised lines on black.
Label text:
Gnathia technique (figures rendered with added color)
Front: a comic actor costumed as an old man running with cakes and fruits falling from his cloak
Back: draped woman
The figures probably represent a misadventure of an old lover bringing a gift to a young courtesan.
Side A. Comic actor as an old man, running to right.
Side B. Woman standing with body nearly full front, and profile to right. Flesh colored white, yellow details. Drapery in incised lines on black.
Label text:
Gnathia technique (figures rendered with added color)
Front: a comic actor costumed as an old man running with cakes and fruits falling from his cloak
Back: draped woman
The figures probably represent a misadventure of an old lover bringing a gift to a young courtesan.
ProvenanceBy date unknown: W. H. Forman Collection; inherited from him by Mrs. Burt and then, about 1889, by A. H. Browne; by 1899: with Sotheby, Wilkinson & Hodge, 13 Wellington Street, Strand, London W.C., England, auction of the Forman Collection, June 19-22, lot 370; by 1899: with Edward Perry Warren; purchased by MFA from Edward Perry Warren, February 1900