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Nikosthenes Painter (6th BCE)
(attributed to the workshop of): Kylix (Drinking Cup). Greek; Athens, about 530/520 B.C. This vase honors Dionysos as the god of both wine and the theater. When the drinker raised the cup to his mouth, it doubled almost as a theatrical mask, with the handles serving as ears and the circular hollow representing a mouth. The round, wide eyes staring back at the viewer symbolize the intoxicating effects of the drink, the wine god’s gaze, or both. Drinking vessels decorated in this manner are called eye cups. Terra-cotta, black-figure technique, 11.1 cm (4 3/8 in.) x 31.1 cm (12 1/4 in.). Anonymous loan, 16.2012.
Location
The Art Institute of Chicago/Chicago/USA
Unique Identifier
ART544699
Type
Image
Purpose
Public
Size
4786px Ă— 3971px
Photo Credit
The Art Institute of Chicago / Art Resource, NY
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Tags
6th century BCE
Bacchus
Black Figure Vase Painting
Cup
Drinking
Eye
Kylix