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- Q2142072 subject Q6483858.
- Q2142072 subject Q7645091.
- Q2142072 subject Q7838169.
- Q2142072 subject Q8881144.
- Q2142072 abstract "The Rider Amphora is the name given to a Melian pithamphora in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens with the inventory number 912. It dates from around 660 BC.The Rider Amphora belongs to the wider examples of the type. Its name derives from its main image, which recalls that on the somewhat older Horses Amphora: two horses stand opposite each other, with a large palmette between them. However, in this image, a rider sits on each of the horses' backs. Each rider leads another horse with him, using a rope, which is depicted slightly offset behind the rider's horse. Ekschmitt claims that the painter of this amphora does not show the talent of the painter of the Horses Amphora since the bodies of his horses are far too long and as a result the rider appears unnaturally small. Convention apparently forced the painter to adapt his motif to a restricted space. The empty room around this space was filled with various designs inherited from earlier Cycladic art, including the zigzag bands and diamonds. The neck of the amphora is decorated with bulging double palmette volutes, which are separated from one another by vertical bands. On the backside, the painter depicts two riderless horses facing each other. There are no images on the other two sides. The vessel is 90 cm high.".
- Q2142072 thumbnail Nama_912_Melian_Rider_amphora.jpg?width=300.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q1919371.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q2083635.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q218626.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q2586345.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q637187.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q6483858.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q677655.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q7645091.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q7838169.
- Q2142072 wikiPageWikiLink Q8881144.
- Q2142072 comment "The Rider Amphora is the name given to a Melian pithamphora in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens with the inventory number 912. It dates from around 660 BC.The Rider Amphora belongs to the wider examples of the type. Its name derives from its main image, which recalls that on the somewhat older Horses Amphora: two horses stand opposite each other, with a large palmette between them. However, in this image, a rider sits on each of the horses' backs.".
- Q2142072 label "Rider Amphora".
- Q2142072 depiction Nama_912_Melian_Rider_amphora.jpg.