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- Q484609 subject Q8212671.
- Q484609 subject Q8254919.
- Q484609 subject Q8555053.
- Q484609 subject Q8879511.
- Q484609 abstract "The Analatos Painter was an Attic vase painter of the Early Proto-Attic style.The true name of the Analatos Painter is unknown. His conventional name is derived from the central Attic area of Analatos (where today is built Nea Smyrni), where several of his works have been excavated. His name vase is a hydria. He belongs to the transition from Late Geometric to Early Proto-Attic vase painting. He is thought to have been a pupil of the Late Geometric Statathou Painter. The earliest works ascribed to him are still within a clear Late Geometric tradition. For example, one of his Geometric hydriai depicts a prothesis (laying-out of a body), showing Egyptian influences. The adoption of eastern influences was a key feature of the subsequent Orientalising Period, of which the Analatos Painter was one of the main early proponents. Characteristic of this new style were fantastic animals, sphinxes without wings or faces, rows of dancing men or women, cable patterns and rosettes. His oldest known amphora, now in Oxford (Ashmolean Museum) shows a row of two-horsed chariots on its belly, as does a loutrophoros in the Louvre and several other pieces. In the execution of detail, he frequently followed older precepts. His period of activity is estimated to be similar to that of the Mesogeia Painter, between circa 700 and 675 BC. Besides amphorai and hydriai, he also painted kraters, bowls and lids. A votive plaque attributed to him bears the inscription ΣΟΝΟΣΈΠΙΣΤ (sonos epist), indicating that he was literate. Additionally, it is the oldest known painted inscription in Greek. It is possible that the Analatos Painter was also a potter.".
- Q484609 thumbnail Loutrophoros_Analatos_Louvre_CA2985_n2.jpg?width=300.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q122443.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q1236678.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q151480.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q178401.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q181260.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q19675.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q279304.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q34217.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q35497.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q366228.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q476968.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q492201.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q546634.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q566658.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q636400.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q738680.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q745783.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q8212671.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q8254919.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q852337.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q8555053.
- Q484609 wikiPageWikiLink Q8879511.
- Q484609 type Thing.
- Q484609 comment "The Analatos Painter was an Attic vase painter of the Early Proto-Attic style.The true name of the Analatos Painter is unknown. His conventional name is derived from the central Attic area of Analatos (where today is built Nea Smyrni), where several of his works have been excavated. His name vase is a hydria. He belongs to the transition from Late Geometric to Early Proto-Attic vase painting. He is thought to have been a pupil of the Late Geometric Statathou Painter.".
- Q484609 label "Analatos Painter".
- Q484609 depiction Loutrophoros_Analatos_Louvre_CA2985_n2.jpg.