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Sisyphus, watched by Persephone and Hades, undergoes his punishment in the Underworld. Attic black-
Athletes running. Side B of a black-figure Panathenaic amphora, attr. to the Kleophrades Painter; ca
Aphrodite rescuing her son Aeneas* Etruscan amphora* c. 480 BCE* Martin von Wagner MuseumSource: Bib
Mosaic (made of polychrome marble tesserae) depicting an amphora with doves perched on the rim, flan
Neck-Amphora With a Man Playing a CitharaGreece, Attica, c. 510 BC
A lion. Attic black-figure amphora, attr. to the Gorgon Painter; ca. 600-575 BCE. Now in the Louvre
Art of the Day: Amphora with Musical Scene One of the prominent painters of classical Athens, the Ni
Young people gather olives. Attic black-figure neck amphora, attr. to the Antimenes Painter; ca. 520
Ancient roman amphoras, Pompeii, Italy
met-greekroman-art:Glass amphora (two-handled bottle), Metropolitan Museum of Art: Greek and Roman A
Ancient Greek vase art by the so called Meidias Painter, 5th century B.C.
James Petrucci (American, b. 1974, Santa Barbara, CA, USA) - 1: Amphora, 2016 Oil, Mixed Media on Pa
Nikosthenic Amphora, Nikosthenes, 0, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman ArtThe distinctive sha
lionofchaeronea:Hermes and his mother Maia (part of a larger scene showing an assembly of the gods).
lionofchaeronea:A helmet crowned with a myrtle wreath. Attic black-figure amphora, artist unknown;
The Calydonian Boar Hunt. Attic black-figure amphora, variously attributed to a painter of the Tyrr
Dionysus faces two Maenads, one of whom holds a hare. Side B of an Attic black-figure neck-amphora,
Hector dons his armor, while his parents Priam and Hecuba look on. Side A of an Attic red-figure pa
Neoptolemus murders King Priam on the altar of Zeus, while Priam’s wife Hecuba looks on. Side A of
didoofcarthage:Fragment, probably from an amphora, with Pentheus attacked by maenads, attributed to
Amphora (Wine Jug), 520, Cleveland Museum of Art: Greek and Roman ArtThe Greek potters’ art at
A helmet crowned with a myrtle wreath. Attic black-figure amphora, artist unknown; ca. 575-550 BCE.
A scene from the Gigantomachy: Ares and another figure (usually identified as Phobos, less often as
Heracles kills the Nemean Lion. Black-figure neck amphora by a painter of the Polyphemus Group, ca.
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