Wine Ladle (Kyathos) with Courtship Scene
Wine Ladle (Kyathos) with Courtship Scene
Artist
Workshop of the potter Nikosthenes
Greek
Place of OriginGreece, Athens (with a questionable dealer-reported findspot in Vulci, Italy)
Dateabout 510-490 BCE
DimensionsH (to top of handle): 6 1/6 in. (15.4 cm); H (to lip): 2 31/32 in. (7.5 cm); Diam (lip): 4 7/16 in. (11.3 cm); Diam (foot): 2 11/32 in. (6 cm)
MediumTerracotta with black-figure decoration, added red and white
.
ClassificationCeramics
Credit LinePurchased with funds from the Libbey Endowment, Gift of Edward Drummond Libbey
Object number
1966.110
Not on View
Collections
Published ReferencesRiefstahl, Rudolf M., "Greek Vases," Toledo Museum of Art Museum News, vol. 11, no. 2, 1968, p. 34.
- Decorative Arts
Eisman, M.M., "New Attributions of Attic Kyanthoi," American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 77, 1973, p. 71.
Luckner, Kurt T., "Greek Vases: Shapes and Uses," Toledo Museum of Art Museum News, vol. 15, no. 3, 1972, p. 79.
Boulter, Cedric G., and Kurt T. Luckner, Corpus vasorum antiquorum: Toledo Museum of Art, U.S.A. Fasc. 17, Toledo, 1976, p. 21-22, repr. pl. 30.
Comparative ReferencesSee also Beazley, John D., "Some Attic Vases in the Cyprus Museum," Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 33, 1947, pp. 198 ff. (on the meaning of this conventional pose of men and boys).Label TextThis wine ladle, or kyathos, depicts a bearded man perhaps talking with a youth holding a rooster—a traditional courtship gift. The scene shows the romantic or sexual aspect common to traditional mentorships between adult men and adolescent boys in ancient Athens . While these relationships were accepted in their historical context, they are understood differently today and raise uncomfortable questions about exploitation, power imbalances, and consent. The large eyes flanking the central scene served to ward against evil and added visual impact, animating the vessel when it is seen from different angles.Workshop of the potter Nikosthenes
about 520 BCE
Unidentified, Gorgoneion Group
about 560 BCE
4th-5th century CE
12th century
Membership
Become a TMA member today
Support TMA
Help support the TMA mission