Ure Museum Database



Browse
There are 9 objects for which Attribution contains → type
45.10.1 A.C. Smith. The lotus bud is quite unusual, and this and other decorative elements relate this epichysis to the Egg and Wave Group, a workshop that specialised in small vases and was related to he Iliupersis Painter. There is also a slight resemblance to the work of the Lampas Group, followers of the plain style: cf. Scottsdale, Cutler Collection (RVAp 11/206a). Although no other epichyses have been attributed to this group/artist, the group seems to represent the work of a versatile artist, influenced by the Truro and Lecce Painters and associates, who favored smaller vases, specialising in single figures, often animals, surrounded by ornament of the type shown on this epichysis, especially tendrils, buds, and bulls-eyes, with large added white dots. Cf. especially Karlsruhe B 938 (RVAp 10/232) and New London, Lyman Allyn Museum 1955.1.83 (RVAp 10/234).
50.4.5 Beazley 1947, 182 named this group of Etruscan vases decorated with (floral) patterns after one of the several similar type 7 oinochoai in Toronto. Look for ref. to Harari ?
78.7.1 JRG 14.11.2003 says from the way the vine is used and the shape (skyphos of Attic type rather than kotyle) it might be 'Circle of the Rose Painter'
L.2011.1.36 Deneuve J., Lampes de Carthage: type VD, rounded nozzle with simple volutes (=Vindonissa, type V)
L.2011.1.37 For the sacred monogram in the central discus see to Catalogue of the lamps in British Museum, vol III, 27, pl. 20, group I(c)iii, no Q1761, Hayes type IIB; comparisons in Ennabli 868-76; Hayes ROM 290, all from Carthage. For the shoulder decoration (herring-bone pattern), compare with Q2568, Q2569 (Catalogue of British Museum).
L.2011.1.38 Deneuve type IX A "Firmalampen"
L.2011.1.43 For the decoration of the central discus, see the Catalogue of British Museum, vol. III, group I(c)iii, no Q1759. For the quatrefoil pattern on the shoulder, compare to Q1768, Ennabli type I4.
L.2011.1.48 Deneuve type VII A o B; For the scene in the central discus, a Nereid riding a sea-bull, see the Catalogue of British Museum, vol. II, group I(b)x (Followers of Neptune), no Q886 type B
REDMG:1951.144.1 McPhee and Trendall 1987, IVA/118, 127-28: The cuttlefish, with body outlined in white and decorated with black horizontal stripes, two large black eyes, and a cluster of tentacles (some white), is typical of a particular painter denoted by the Group of Karlsruhe 66/140. Further characteristics of this Group evidenced on the Reading plate are the bream's pectoral fin, which takes the form of an open fan with vertical cross-strokes; and the use of a mussel as filler; the decoration of the central depression with a rosette of the 'ice cream cone' type, surrounded by a wave border; the laurel wreath on the overhanging rim.
The Ure Museum is part of
The University of Reading, Whiteknights, PO Box 217, Reading, RG6 6AH