Apulian Gnathian Ware Polychromed Skyphos

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Apulian Gnathian Ware Polychromed Skyphos

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Barakat Gallery Emirates Palace
Gnathian Pyxis
South Italian, Sicilian, late 4th century B.C.
Place made: Sicily, South Italy
Ceramic
Princeton University Art Museum
Kantharos
South Italian, Apulian, Gnathian, late 4th century B.C.
Place made: possibly Campania, South Italy
Ceramic
Princeton University Art Museum
Gnathia Ware: Pelike
South Italian, ca. 300 B.C.
Place made: Apulia, South Italy
Ceramic
Princeton University Art Museum

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Gnathian ware bowl with painted lyres and shell feet
South Italian , Sicilian, early 3rd century B.C.
Place made: Sicily, South Italy
Ceramic
Princeton University Art Museum
Greek Gnathian Teano Ware Plate, Campania, 340-320 BC
Teano ware is a genre of ceramics created in the last quarter of the 4th century BC to the first half of the 3rd century BC and named for the ancient Teanum Sidicinum, the primary site in northern Campania where they were found, most likely their main center of production. Black is the primary color with added white pigment used for the painted decoration and fine red teardrop forms highlighting the stamped central flower on the tondo as well as fine red miltos used to highlight the incised grooves. The clay is pale orange. This plate is a typical example of Teano ware in its shape and decoration, most likely used for votive or funerary purposes.
Fragments of a terracotta calyx-krater (mixing bowl)
Period: Late Classical
Date: ca. 360–340 B.C.
Culture: Greek, South Italian, Apulian, Gnathian
Medium: Terracotta; added color
The ransom of Hector and a satyr standing before a woman
Metropolitan Museum of Art