On view

Ancient Mediterranean Art

Janiform kantharos with addorsed heads of a male African and a female Greek,

ca. 480–470 BCE

Attributed to the Princeton Class
Greek, Attic
y1933-45

This Athenian kantharos, a high-handled wine-cup, depicts addorsed male and female faces. Potters in ancient Athens and elsewhere produced numerous vessels with either single or paired faces. Vases of the type shown here are frequently described in modern racial terms as “Black” and “white,” but these concepts were absent in antiquity. Ancient Greeks referred to people who today are racialized as Black as Aithiopes (a compound of the words for “I blaze” and “face”), and Aithiopia was a generic name for the region of Africa south of Egypt. This vase, then, is best understood as a representation of a young Aithiops man and perhaps an Athenian woman. The elite male drinking party, the symposium, was one setting in which the cup might have been used. Since the woman wears a diadem of ivy, an attribute of the wine-god Dionysos, the vase likely portrays revelers in his retinue.

Najee Olya, Assistant Professor, Classical Studies, the College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA

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Special Exhibition

Information

Title
Janiform kantharos with addorsed heads of a male African and a female Greek
Dates

ca. 480–470 BCE

Maker
Attributed to the Princeton Class
Medium
Ceramic
Dimensions
14.9 x 13.8 x 11.2 cm, diam. rim 9.2 cm (5 7/8 x 5 7/16 x 4 7/16 x 3 5/8 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of Junius S. Morgan, Class of 1888
Object Number
y1933-45
Culture
Materials

Lot no. 102 of Castellari sale, 1884; lot no. 375 in Thomas Benedict Clark sale, 1899; bequest of Junius S. Morgan to the Museum in 1933