On view

Ancient Mediterranean Art

Plate depicting marine creatures,

ca. 345–330 BCE

attributed to the Perrone-Phrixos Group
South Italian, Apulian
Classical Period, ca. 480–323 BCE
y1989-54
Fish plates get their name from the red-figure fish and sea creatures that adorn them. The distinctive shape—a broad floor sloping to a central depression, deeply overhanging rim, and stout ring foot—originated in Athens at the end of the fifth century BCE. The depression in the center may have trapped juices or held a sauce. Fish plates must have been exchanged between Greece and Italy because their forms were adopted by the potters of South Italy and Sicily. Roman vase-painters adorned these wares with regional species of fish rendered in vibrant colors and with extensive use of shading. The plate made in Paestum features two striped perch, bream, a shrimp, a scallop, and an ebullient octopus, while the other, made in Apulia, displays a similar array of sea creatures.

Information

Title
Plate depicting marine creatures
Dates

ca. 345–330 BCE

Maker
attributed to the Perrone-Phrixos Group
Medium
Red figure ceramic
Dimensions
diam. 31.2 cm (12 5/16 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, gift of John B. Elliott, Class of 1951
Object Number
y1989-54
Place Made

Europe, Italy, Apulia (southern Italy)

Culture
Materials