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Cover for Stamnos depicting women congregated about an idol of Dionysos
Greek
Early Classical Period
about 450 B.C.
Place of Manufacture: Greece, Attica, Athens
Medium/Technique
Ceramic, Red Figure
Dimensions
Height: 47.4 cm (18 11/16 in.); diameter 33.4 cm (13 1/8 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Edward Perry Warren
Accession Number90.155b
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsAncient Greece and Rome
ClassificationsVessels
DescriptionCover. Decorated with rays and circles.
[Label text]:
In the scene depicted here, women are gathered at a festival of Dionysus. The women have erected an image of the god in this outdoor celebration. A mask of Dionysus has been hung on a pole while drapery held by large pins suggests the body of the makeshift cult image. The women have decorated the idol with garlands of ivy. Loaves or cakes have been heaped on the table in front of the image of the god as offerings to him. One of the celebrants ladles wine from a stamnos while a woman plays the pipes to add to the festive air of the ceremony. It is notable that these women are not maenads, the followers of Dionysus on the margins of society. These Greek women were allowed to worship Dionysus at a state-sponsored festival.
[Label text]:
In the scene depicted here, women are gathered at a festival of Dionysus. The women have erected an image of the god in this outdoor celebration. A mask of Dionysus has been hung on a pole while drapery held by large pins suggests the body of the makeshift cult image. The women have decorated the idol with garlands of ivy. Loaves or cakes have been heaped on the table in front of the image of the god as offerings to him. One of the celebrants ladles wine from a stamnos while a woman plays the pipes to add to the festive air of the ceremony. It is notable that these women are not maenads, the followers of Dionysus on the margins of society. These Greek women were allowed to worship Dionysus at a state-sponsored festival.
ProvenanceBy 1890: with Edward Perry Warren (according to E. Robinson vase catalogue: purchased in Rome, 1890 as an Anonymous gift); Novemer 4, 1890: gift of Edward Perry Warren to MFA