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Woman with Pitcher and Bowl

Woman with Pitcher and Bowl

Greek

Standing with the weight shifted to one leg and the other slightly advanced, this woman holds a pitcher in her proper right hand and a shallow bowl (a phiale mesomphalos, with a central “navel” or boss) in her left. These attributes indicate that she is about to pour a libation, most likely at an altar in a sanctuary or domestic setting. She is dressed in a peplos, a one-piece woolen garment pinned at the shoulders and belted at the waist. Her hair is covered by a bonnet. The figure stands on a base and is tilted toward the back. Of reddish-brown terracotta with remains of a white slip, it is hollow throughout, with a large rectangular vent hole at back. It was likely made in Attica or neighboring Boeotia. In its current state, the statuette is reassembled from several fragments.

Terracotta

Classical period, Early

Sculpture