1968.2, Black figure band cup, Greek, Attic, c. 540-530 BCE, ceramic


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
War and fighting were common subjects in ancient Greek culture, and were frequently depicted in art. In the scenes on this cup, the artist seems less interested in depicting actual combat than in rendering different types of combatants. They are not engaged with one another but simply put on display as miniature studies. Band cups belong to the category of "Little Master Cups" and were popularized in Athens from the 550s to about 520 BCE. The reserved strip between the handles accounts for the name and carries the figure decoration. Painters of these cups preferred a miniature scale for the figures, and the cup pictured here displays the artist's ability to design his scenes with a multitude of characters with appropriate detail and still allow for adequate spacing. 

The compositions on both sides of the cup depict crowded scenes filled with warriors and artificial inscriptions. Each frieze of armed men contains three horsemen holding spears, wearing short white tunics, and except for a figure in the center of one side, cloaks. Interspersed around the horsemen are three warriors in armor, all with spears, and two men wearing or holding cloaks. The warriors wear low-crested helmets and greaves and hold round shields. These last vary in decoration: a ram, a starburst, and a lion for shield blazons on one side, and a starburst and a lion on the other, with the middle shield once covered with white paint. The rows of dots in the field around the figures give the semblance of letters in inscriptions, often without meaning, that regularly contribute to the subsidiary decoration of a figured scene.

Adapted from
Anne R. Bromberg, and Karl Kilinski II, Gods, Men, and Heroes: Ancient Art at the Dallas Museum of Art. (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1996), 67.

NOTES
updated geo x ref
updated exhibition history

fun fact source:
Notes from visit of 24 April 1987 with Arielle Kozloff and Carlos Picon found in Collections Records Object File 1968.2

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1968: Elie Borowski, Basel, Switzerland 

From 1968: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, gift of the Dallas Foundation, purchased from above [1]

[1] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS
This cup was broken and repaired in antiquity, the holes in this piece are from ancient staples which would have held it together, denoting how highly prized it was to its original owner.

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1968.2

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General Description
 
War and fighting were common subjects in ancient Greek culture, and were frequently depicted in art. In the scenes on this cup, the artist seems less interested in depicting actual combat than in rendering different types of combatants. They are not engaged with one another but simply put on display as miniature studies. Band cups belong to the category of "Little Master Cups" and were popularized in Athens from the 550s to about 520 BCE. The reserved strip between the handles accounts for the name and carries the figure decoration. Painters of these cups preferred a miniature scale for the figures, and the cup pictured here displays the artist's ability to design his scenes with a multitude of characters with appropriate detail and still allow for adequate spacing. 

The compositions on both sides of the cup depict crowded scenes filled with warriors and artificial inscriptions. Each frieze of armed men contains three horsemen holding spears, wearing short white tunics, and except for a figure in the center of one side, cloaks. Interspersed around the horsemen are three warriors in armor, all with spears, and two men wearing or holding cloaks. The warriors wear low-crested helmets and greaves and hold round shields. These last vary in decoration: a ram, a starburst, and a lion for shield blazons on one side, and a starburst and a lion on the other, with the middle shield once covered with white paint. The rows of dots in the field around the figures give the semblance of letters in inscriptions, often without meaning, that regularly contribute to the subsidiary decoration of a figured scene.

Adapted from
Anne R. Bromberg, and Karl Kilinski II, Gods, Men, and Heroes: Ancient Art at the Dallas Museum of Art. (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1996), 67.

Fun Facts
This cup was broken and repaired in antiquity, the holes in this piece are from ancient staples which would have held it together, denoting how highly prized it was to its original owner.

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
updated geo x ref
updated exhibition history

fun fact source:
Notes from visit of 24 April 1987 with Arielle Kozloff and Carlos Picon found in Collections Records Object File 1968.2

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 
Until 1968: Elie Borowski, Basel, Switzerland 

From 1968: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, gift of the Dallas Foundation, purchased from above [1]

[1] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1968.2
tags
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
*Classical Art
@Bowling
ceramic (material): AAT: 300235507
%Archived
men: AAT: 300025928
cups (drinking vessels): AAT: 300043202
human figures: AAT: 300404114
wine: AAT: 300379442
bands (decorative): DMA
Greece_Ancient: TGN: 7594735
Greek_Ancient (culture or style): AAT: 300020072
wars: AAT: 300055314
warriors: AAT: 300261945
horses (animals): AAT: 300250148
ceramics (object genre): AAT: 300151343
spears (weapons): AAT: 300037038
black-figure (style): AAT: 300020195
black-figure vase painting: AAT: 300387209
black-figure vase paintings (visual works): AAT: 300387206
fighting: AAT: 300379967
stylization: AAT: 300055836
friezes (ornamental areas): AAT: 300123582
band cups: AAT: 300198910
source file
object_notes_2_c-0026.xml.nores