![]() ![]() ![]() The article’s last part deals with the contextualisation of the discovery in the framework of the caeretan society of the archaic period. As a matter of fact, this is the only episode of Heracles’ biography in which we can find all together these elements: Heracles represented as an archer, a meat meal, flying birds, centaurs. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like The 'Aristonothos Krater', a ceramic krater probably produced at Pithekoussai but discovered at the Etruscan site of Caere, 675-650 BCE. At the end of a long demonstration, the character is tentatively identified by the present Author as Heracles and the story as the meeting of the hero with the centaur Pholos. The Author re-examines this document from an iconographical point of view on the basis of the identification of three new elements passed unnoticed until now: 1) a bow and a quiver behind the seated man 2) some pieces of meat laying on the plate 3) a scene with galloping centaurs armed with tree branches in the upper frieze. 45 of Roncalli’s corpus (a bearded seated man holding a plate toward which a big bird is flying from top left), this plaque of the Campetti’ series has been neglected by etruscologists. 1), in uno spazio libero da figure, rientra nella norma delle firme su vasi, costituita com’ da un nome personale in nominativo ed un verbo alla terza persona singolare dell’aoristo: ci non toglie che l’uno e l’altro abbiano bisogno di un commento e siano stati. Due to the uncommon subject of the panel nr. Federica Cordano La firma apposta dal pittore sul cratere di Cerveteri (fig. The best preserved of these archaic paintings from Campetti depict the greek myths of Perseus attacking the Gorgons and the Paris’ judgment (Roncalli’s corpus: nr. /rebates/2f3d-models2f41026-mnpm-aristonothos-krater-362c6900dcb14a1a9c44a40f52b695d2&252f3d-models252f41026-mnpm-aristonothos-krater-362c6900dcb14a1a9c44a40f52b695d226tc3dbing-&idsketchfab&nameSketchfab+Inc. Focus of the present article is an etruscan painted plaque found out at Cerveteri (Campetti) in the 1940s by Mario Moretti, who published it in 1957 together with other panels that afterwards Francesco Roncalli labelled the “Gorgon series” in his monographic essay.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |