Loading, please wait...

Use mousewheel to zoom in and out, click to enlarge

Details

LOT 0063

Attic Red-Figure Bell Krater with Drunken Male Revellers Attributed to the Kadmos Painter

5TH-4TH CENTURY B.C.

14 1/2 in. (3.8 kg, 37 cm wide).

With a high foot, laurel wreath encircling the neck, checkerboard and meander patterns alternating around the lower body, roundels of tongue motif to the handles with palmettes and tendrils below; two red-figure scenes to the body: Side a: a high-quality depiction of a Kōmos composed of five figures, including a young man holding a torch, a double flute player next to three dancers, all possibly followers of Dionysus; side b: three draped figures conversing comprising a central female figure between two opposed male figures, one holding a staff.

Provenance

Ex Feuardent collection, France, collected in the late 19th century (two old labels: one with 3061-133) on the inner rim and 113/2 (an old lot label from the 1900s/1920s) on the sidewall, further old assession numbers under the base: 321 and 35).
Private collection, acquired in Paris, 2004.

Accompanied by a copy of a thermoluminescence analysis report no.N111j79 from Oxford Authentication.
Accompanied by an academic report by Dr Raffaele D’Amato.
This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by search certificate number no.11786-206517.

Literature

Cf. The Getty Museum, accession number 80.AE.139.1, for a comparable trio of figures on a bell-krater, Lucanian, c.420 B.C.; cf. The Metropolitan Museum, New York, accession number 96.18.37, for a very similar vessel form, Etruscan, early 4th century B.C., accession number 07.286.85, for a depiction of Dionysos on a bell-krater; cf. The British Museum, museum number 1824,0501.18, for a similar form and displaying an ephebi trio.

Footnotes

The Kadmos Painter was an Athenian red-figure vase painter, whose real name is unknown. His nickname was bestowed by Beazley, naming him after the subject of a famous hydria in Berlin (Antikensammlungen Berlin/Altes Museum, found in Vulci). He illustrated many mythological scenes, sometimes with figures arranged up and down the field, usually on bell craters, vessels used in symposia for mixing wine and water. A Komos was a ritualistic drunken procession performed by revellers in ancient Greece. It preceded and/or followed the banquet, whether unbridled in nature with music and games, or serious and mythical.

CONDITION

VETTING:

TimeLine Auctions follows a vetting process to ensure the authenticity and legality of all items, reinforcing our commitment to integrity and responsible trading. Each antiquity, antique, and coin lot undergoes thorough examination by a vetting committee of at least ten external specialists, professional trade association members, scientists, and archaeologists: Our Vetting Process


AUCTIONS:

TimeLine is a leading auction house specialising in antiquities, ancient art, collectables, natural history, coins, medals, and books. Our auctions offer museums, collectors, historians, and enthusiasts the opportunity to acquire unique and historically significant pieces.

LOT 0063

Attic Red-Figure Bell Krater with Drunken Male Revellers Attributed to the Kadmos Painter

Estimate £40,000 - 60,000€46,400 - 69,600 (for guidance only)$54,000 - 81,000 (for guidance only)

Print page

RELATED LOTS

  • Greek Marble Funerary Anthemion Stele
    Greek Marble Funerary Anthemion Stele
    4th century B.C.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £17,550

    Comprising a tall, plain body with two rosettes; crowned by an elaborate palmette and volute design with shallow acanthus stalks and small rosettes; mounted on a custom-made display stand. 55.6 kg total, 105.5 cm high including stand (95.2 cm without stand)



    Private Swiss collection, acquired in the 1980s. with Ward & Co., New York, 2014. Private American collection, K.M., circa 2015-present. Accompanied by a copy of an Art Loss Register certificate number S00114167, dated 2 June 2016. Accompanied by an academic report by Dr Raffaele D’Amato. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by a search certificate number no.11776-204598.

    These memorials, originally painted (see gravestone from Paramythion, cf. Brinkmann-Wünsche, 2004, pp.148ff.), were venerated by families, anointed with oil, decorated with ribbons, and graced with offerings of food. They rivalled each other in the increasingly ostentatious display of family status and wealth, so much so that by the end of the 4th century B.C., a sumptuary law was passed, abruptly ceasing their production. In their heyday, these stelae provided sculptors an opportunity to demonstrate their technical virtuosity with both ornamental and figural subjects. It was not unusual for the anthemion to be of higher quality than the figures sculpted and painted below it.

    Lot Details

  • Cypriot Decorated Amphora
    Cypriot Decorated Amphora
    700-600 B.C.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £3,120

    Creamware body with broad neck and pear-shaped body, trumpet-shaped base; ribbed strap handles extending to the everted rim; painted with dense zones of concentric black chevrons, rings, and other geometric ornament, red detailing. 1.12 kg, 23.5 cm high



    with Christie's, London, 11 July 1990, lot 122. Subsequently in the collection of Dr Takey Crist, Jacksonville, North Carolina.

    Lot Details

  • Greek Black-Glazed Lekythos
    Greek Black-Glazed Lekythos
    5th century B.C.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £572

    Squat-bodied with a slender neck, shaped neck and D-section handle. 47 grams, 66 mm



    Acquired in Europe before 2001. European collection.

    Lot Details

Stay up-to-date with the latest from TimeLine Auctions by joining our mailing list