Red-Figure Bail Amphora (Storage Vessel): Draped Women

Description

The bail amphora, named for the tall handle arching over the mouth, is a shape made primarily in Campania, where red-figure vases were produced at both Capua and Cumae in the 4th century BC. The anonymous painter of this vase is known as the CA Painter, for Cumae A, the first significant artist in this area. The seated and standing women on both sides of the vase, some only partially draped (and their white skin now largely lost), recall those on many of the painter’s other vases, as do the elaborate palmette patterns on either side.

Provenance

Gorga Collection; Museo Nationale di Villa Giulia, Rome, Italy; Italian Ministry of Public Education, gifted to the Cleveland Museum of Art (1967); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Oh (1967-)

Red-Figure Bail Amphora (Storage Vessel): Draped Women

CA Painter

330–320 BCE

Accession Number

1967.245

Medium

ceramic

Dimensions

Diameter: 12.2 cm (4 13/16 in.); Overall: 54.6 cm (21 1/2 in.)

Classification

Ceramic

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Italian Ministry of Public Education