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- Gnathia_vases abstract "Gnathia vases are a type of ancient South Italian vase painting of the 4th century BC. They are named after the ancient city of Gnathia (now Egnazia) in Eastern Apulia. There, the first examples of the style were discovered in the mid-19th century. Their production began in Apulia around 370/360 BC, in parallel to the local version of the red-figure style which developed tendencies towards polychromy around that time. Typical of Gnathia vases is the application of different paints directly onto the glazed vase body. Additionally, internal details could be added by incision. The themes depicted include erotes, images from the life of women, theatre scenes and dionysiac motifs. Figural, painting is often limited to the upper half of the vessel body, while the bottom half often bears only ornamental decoration. The most common shapes were bell kraters, pelikes, oinochoai and skyphoi. The most important artists are the Konnakis Painter and the Rose Painter. Initially, a broad palette of paints, including white, yellow, orange, red, brown, green and others, was used, but after 330 BC the extensive use of white paint dominated. At the same time, the thematic range was reduced, limiting itself to tendrils of vine, ivy or laurel, theatrical masks, and, within the tendrils, male and female heads, doves and swans. The lower half of the vessels was now often ribbed. Apart from oinochoai, skyphos and pelikes, shapes also included bottles, lekythoi, bowls and kantharoi. The most important painters of this phase are the Painter of the Louvre Bottle and the Dunedin Painter. The final phase comprised about 25 years. It is marked by a retirn to figural painting, predominantly depicting erotes. Kantharoi and bowls with painted-on handles are now the main shapes. Ribbing is still in use, as is the copious application of white paint, now with yellow added for shading. Unlike local red-figure pottery, South Italian Gnathia vases were also traded to other regions of the Mediterranean and Black Sea areas. They had considerable influence on some local pottery styles, such as West Slope pottery. Gnathia vases were not only produced in Apulian, but also in Campanian, Paestan and Sicilian vase painting. In South Italy, only Lucanian vase painting did not generally imitate them. In Etruria, the Pocolum Class was produced by a vase painter who had immigrated from Southern Italy.".
- Gnathia_vases thumbnail Epichysis_Louvre_ED859.jpg?width=300.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageID "33502886".
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageLength "3413".
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageOutDegree "35".
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageRevisionID "661158729".
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Apulia.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Apulian_vase_painting.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Black_Sea.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Campanian_vase_painting.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Greek_vase-painting_styles.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Dionysus.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Dunedin_Painter.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Egnazia.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Epichysis.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Eros.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Etruria.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Gnatia.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Kantharos.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Konnakis_Painter.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Krater.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Lekythos.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Lucanian_vase_painting.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Mediterranean_Sea.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink National_Museum,_Warsaw.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Oenochoe.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Paestan_vase_painting.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Painter_of_the_Louvre_Bottle.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Pelike.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Pocolum_Class.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Realencyclopädie_der_classischen_Altertumswissenschaft.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Red-figure_pottery.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Rolf_Hurschmann.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Rose_Painter.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Sicilian_vase_painting.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Skyphos.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink South_Italian_ancient_Greek_pottery.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink Warsaw.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink West_Slope_Ware.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLink File:Bell-krater_hare_BM_F547.jpg.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gnathia style".
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gnathia vases".
- Gnathia_vases caption "Epichysis, circa 325/300 BC. Paris: Louvre.".
- Gnathia_vases caption "Lekythos with Eros, third quarter of 4th century BC, National Museum, Warsaw.".
- Gnathia_vases image "Apulia Lekythos in Gnathia style.jpg".
- Gnathia_vases image "Epichysis Louvre ED859.jpg".
- Gnathia_vases width "191".
- Gnathia_vases width "210".
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commonscat.
- Gnathia_vases wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_image.
- Gnathia_vases subject Category:Ancient_Greek_vase-painting_styles.
- Gnathia_vases hypernym Painting.
- Gnathia_vases type Artwork.
- Gnathia_vases comment "Gnathia vases are a type of ancient South Italian vase painting of the 4th century BC. They are named after the ancient city of Gnathia (now Egnazia) in Eastern Apulia. There, the first examples of the style were discovered in the mid-19th century. Their production began in Apulia around 370/360 BC, in parallel to the local version of the red-figure style which developed tendencies towards polychromy around that time.".
- Gnathia_vases label "Gnathia vases".
- Gnathia_vases sameAs Q750145.
- Gnathia_vases sameAs Gnathiakeramik.
- Gnathia_vases sameAs Ceramica_di_Gnathia.
- Gnathia_vases sameAs m.0h98519.
- Gnathia_vases sameAs Гнафия.
- Gnathia_vases sameAs Гнафія.
- Gnathia_vases sameAs Q750145.
- Gnathia_vases wasDerivedFrom Gnathia_vases?oldid=661158729.
- Gnathia_vases depiction Epichysis_Louvre_ED859.jpg.
- Gnathia_vases isPrimaryTopicOf Gnathia_vases.