On view
Ancient Mediterranean Art
Red-figure lekythos: Nike at altar,
ca. 480 BCE
attributed to the Bowdoin Painter
Greek, Attic
y1928-28
In the ancient Mediterranean, divine bodies could be shown using many representational strategies: the gods could be painted on vases or fashioned from bronze, marble, or wood; they might be rendered so small that they could sit in one’s hand, or so large that they towered over worshippers; and many gods could be depicted in multiple shapes and forms or with different iconographic attributes. These choices dramatically affected how a god’s image was perceived and, as a consequence, how the god’s presence could be experienced by their worshippers. Surviving ancient literary accounts describe how particularly striking images of the gods could elicit powerful responses in their viewers, provoking epiphanies, or sacred visions of the divine.
Information
Title
Red-figure lekythos: Nike at altar
Dates
ca. 480 BCE
Maker
attributed to the Bowdoin Painter
Medium
Ceramic
Dimensions
h. 25.5 cm, diam. 8.6 cm (10 1/16 x 3 3/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase
Object Number
y1928-28
Culture
Period
Purchased from Seltman in 1928