Brygos Painter
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The name Brygos appears on several vases and cups of the late 6th century BCE and early 5th century BCE. It is not known whether the signature refers to the potter or painter or indeed whether the two roles were separate, by convention they are referred to as two distinct individuals. The influence of Onesimos is apparent in the Brygos Painter's use of twisting limbs and dramatic foreshortening, it is a possibility that Brygos was a pupil of Onesimos. The Brygos Painter was a prolific artists to whom over two hundred vases have been attributed, but he is perhaps best known for the Brygos Cup, a red-figure kylix in the Louvre which depicts the "iliupersis" or sack of Troy.
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Pottery of ancient Greece | ||
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Wine Shapes | Krater • Kylix • Oinochoe • Skyphos • Psykter • Kyathos • Rhyton • Kantharos | |
Perfume Shapes and Wedding Shapes | Lebes Gamikos • Loutrophoros • Epinetron • Alabastron • Aryballos • Lekythos | |
Funerary Shapes and Cultic Shapes | Lekythos • Loutrophoros • Phiale | |
Storage Shapes | Amphora • Hydria • Lebes • Pithos • Stamnos • Pyxis | |
Techniques | Red-figure • Black-figure • Bilingual pottery • Six's technique • White ground | |
Painters | List of Greek Vase Painters• Amasis Painter • Exekias • Pioneer Group • Douris | |
Special Topics in Greek Pottery | Typology • Kalos inscription • Symposium • Kerameikon • Corpus vasorum antiquorum • John Beazley • Panathenaic Amphorae |