2011.40, Attic red-figure column krater by the Painter of the Louvre Centauromachy


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Designed at the height of classical style in Athens, this red-figure vase combines movement and monumentality in the main scene, reflecting the influence of contemporary sculpture. The story it tells is an early episode in the life of Helen of Troy, whose later abduction by the Trojan prince, Paris, would lead to the Trojan War. Helen was god-born, the daughter of the Spartan queen Leda and Zeus, who seduced the queen while in the form of a swan. When Helen was young, the hero Theseus, who laid the foundation for Athens’ greatness, tried to steal her from her parents to marry her. He was defeated by her brothers, Castor and Pollux, and she later married Menelaus, king of Sparta. The scene on the vase shows Theseus’s attempted abduction of the girl in a dramatic pose worthy of a battle scene.

The Painter of the Louvre Centauromachy is known from some eighty vases and was a vase painter at a great moment in Athenian ceramics. His name vase in the Louvre is also a dramatic scene, with complex motion well-defined by the painter. 

Adapted from
Anne Bromberg, DMA Label copy, 2012.

NOTES
READ
  • DMA unpublished material = extended label text from TMS and 2011 acquisition justification
  • updated culture to Greek in TMS
  • updated provenance and geo x refs
  • fixed typo in the dates (it read 479 instead of 470)

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PROVENANCE 
Late 19th/early 20th century: Private collection (reputedly the Compte de Pourtalès, Hubert de Pourtalès (1863-1949)), France [1]

Mid 20th century: Krimitsas Gallery, Paris

c. 1970: Collection of Michel Cohen, France

Late 1970s-2007: Galerie A La Reine Margot, Paris

2007-2011: Royal Athena Galleries, New York, NY

From 2011: Dallas Museum of Art

[1] The main source for the provenance of this object is the AAMD Object Registry [2011.40]

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WEB RESOURCES 
MET~See another vase by Painter of the Louvre Centauromachy.

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Apply to objects where number equals 2011.40

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General Description
 
Designed at the height of classical style in Athens, this red-figure vase combines movement and monumentality in the main scene, reflecting the influence of contemporary sculpture. The story it tells is an early episode in the life of Helen of Troy, whose later abduction by the Trojan prince, Paris, would lead to the Trojan War. Helen was god-born, the daughter of the Spartan queen Leda and Zeus, who seduced the queen while in the form of a swan. When Helen was young, the hero Theseus, who laid the foundation for Athens’ greatness, tried to steal her from her parents to marry her. He was defeated by her brothers, Castor and Pollux, and she later married Menelaus, king of Sparta. The scene on the vase shows Theseus’s attempted abduction of the girl in a dramatic pose worthy of a battle scene.

The Painter of the Louvre Centauromachy is known from some eighty vases and was a vase painter at a great moment in Athenian ceramics. His name vase in the Louvre is also a dramatic scene, with complex motion well-defined by the painter. 

Adapted from
Anne Bromberg, DMA Label copy, 2012.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
MET~See another vase by Painter of the Louvre Centauromachy.

Notes
READ
  • DMA unpublished material = extended label text from TMS and 2011 acquisition justification
  • updated culture to Greek in TMS
  • updated provenance and geo x refs
  • fixed typo in the dates (it read 479 instead of 470)

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Late 19th/early 20th century: Private collection (reputedly the Compte de Pourtalès, Hubert de Pourtalès (1863-1949)), France [1]

Mid 20th century: Krimitsas Gallery, Paris

c. 1970: Collection of Michel Cohen, France

Late 1970s-2007: Galerie A La Reine Margot, Paris

2007-2011: Royal Athena Galleries, New York, NY

From 2011: Dallas Museum of Art

[1] The main source for the provenance of this object is the AAMD Object Registry [2011.40]

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
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2011.40
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
*Classical Art
@Bowling
ceramic (material): AAT: 300235507
%Archived
myth: AAT: 300201023
Greece_Ancient: TGN: 7594735
vases: AAT: 300132254
Red-figure (painting style): AAT: 300020201
red-figure vase paintings (visual works): AAT: 300387207
red-figure vase painting (image-making): AAT: 300387208
abduction: AAT: 300379834
ceramics (object genre): AAT: 300151343
Athens (Greece): TGN: 7001393
source file
object_notes_2_a-0625.xml.nores