- Meleager Painter
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The Meleager Painter was an ancient Greek vase painter of the Attic red-figure tradition. He was active in the first third of the 4th century BC. The Meleager Painter followed a tradition started by a group of slightly earlier artists, such as the Mikion Painter. He is probably the most important painter of his generation. He painted a wide variety of vase shapes, including even kylikes, a rarity among his contemporaries. His conventional name is derived from several vases depicting hunters, including Atalante and her lover Meleagros. Colonette kraters and bell kraters by him normally bear dionysiac motifs. Like other painters of his time, he liked to paint figures wearing oriental garb. The tondos inside his kylikes are often framed by wreaths. They mostly depict groups of deities or individual gods. The outsides of kylikes and the paintings on the backs of other vases by him are often of inferior quality.
Bibliography
- John D. Beazley. Attic Red Figure Vase Painters. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963.
- John Boardman. Rotfigurige Vasen aus Athen. Die klassische Zeit, Philipp von Zabern, Mainz, 1991 (Kulturgeschichte der Antiken Welt, Band 48), besonders, p. 176 ISBN 3-8053-1262-8.
Source of translation
- This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the German Wikipedia.
Pottery of ancient Greece Wine shapes Perfume shapes and wedding shapes Funerary shapes and cultic shapes Storage shapes Techniques Painters Special topics in Greek pottery Typology · Kalos inscription · Symposium · Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum · John Beazley · Panathenaic Amphorae · South ItalianCategories:- 4th-century BC deaths
- Ancient Greek vase painters
- Anonymous artists of antiquity
- People from Attica
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