Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water) ca. 440 B.C. Attributed to the Painter of London E 497 Obverse, Orpheus among the ThraciansReverse, libation sceneOrpheus, the best known of the mythical musicians, is associated with Thrace in the northernmost part of Greece. After he had descended into the underworld to find his beloved wife, Eurydice, and had lost her, he withdrew into solitude. Feeling rebuffed, Thracian women set upon Orpheus and killed him. Here he is shown seated on a rock formation and engrossed in his music. The central figure, wearing typical Thracian dress, identifies the setting, while the woman who holds a sickle in her left hand foreshadows Orpheus's fate.. Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water). Greek, Attic. ca. 440 B.C.. Terracotta; red-figure. Classical. Vases

Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water) ca. 440 B.C. Attributed to the Painter of London E 497 Obverse, Orpheus among the ThraciansReverse, libation sceneOrpheus, the best known of the mythical musicians, is associated with Thrace in the northernmost part of Greece. After he had descended into the underworld to find his beloved wife, Eurydice, and had lost her, he withdrew into solitude. Feeling rebuffed, Thracian women set upon Orpheus and killed him. Here he is shown seated on a rock formation and engrossed in his music. The central figure, wearing typical Thracian dress, identifies the setting, while the woman who holds a sickle in her left hand foreshadows Orpheus's fate.. Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water). Greek, Attic. ca. 440 B.C.. Terracotta; red-figure. Classical. Vases
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water) ca. 440 B.C. Attributed to the Painter of London E 497 Obverse, Orpheus among the ThraciansReverse, libation sceneOrpheus, the best known of the mythical musicians, is associated with Thrace in the northernmost part of Greece. After he had descended into the underworld to find his beloved wife, Eurydice, and had lost her, he withdrew into solitude. Feeling rebuffed, Thracian women set upon Orpheus and killed him. Here he is shown seated on a rock formation and engrossed in his music. The central figure, wearing typical Thracian dress, identifies the setting, while the woman who holds a sickle in her left hand foreshadows Orpheus's fate.. Terracotta bell-krater (bowl for mixing wine and water). Greek, Attic. ca. 440 B.C.. Terracotta; red-figure. Classical. Vases by Piemags/PL Photography Limited is available for licensing today.
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