Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of terracotta.

Lebes (Stemmed Bowl with Lid)

725-700 BCE

Etruscan; possibly Vulci

Etruria

Situated at the crossroads of Mediterranean trade routes, the Etruscans were avid importers of Greek vases with figural decoration. Many of these vessels survive today because they were buried with their Etruscan owners, and were discovered in tombs only during the last several centuries. This example was made by a local artist who quickly adopted the decorative motifs and painted styles of imported wares and adapted them to local tastes in order to capture some of the market.

When the Greeks established settlements along the Italian coast, they brought with them pottery decorated in the Geometric style. On this ceremonial vessel there are banded decorations of zigzags, diamonds, and cross-hatching. The long-necked birds and stylized horses present recall bronze votive figures from Geometric-period Greece.

terracotta

Arts of Greece, Rome, and Byzantium