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White-ground technique

White-ground technique is a style of white ancient Greek pottery and the painting in which figures appear on a white background. It developed in the region of Attica, dated to about 500 BC. It was especially associated with vases made for ritual and funerary use, if only because the painted surface was more fragile than in the other main techniques of black-figure and red-figure vase painting. Nevertheless, a wide range of subjects are depicted.

Cylix of Apollo, Attic, c. 460 BC. Apollo pours a libation, detail.[1]
Attic white-ground lekythos (type I) depicting Heracles fighting Geryon, Antonino Salinas Regional Archaeological Museum, Palermo
Spinning woman, Attic oinochoe (type III), probably from Locri, by the Brygos Painter, c. 490 BC

Technique and style edit

In white-ground pottery, the vase is covered with a light or white slip of kaolinite. A similar slip had been used as carrier for vase paintings in the Geometric and Archaic periods. White-ground vases were produced, for example, in Ionia, Laconia and on the Cycladic islands, but only in Athens did it develop into a veritable separate style beside black-figure and red-figure vase painting. For that reason, the term "white-ground pottery" or "white-ground vase painting" is usually used in reference to the Attic material only.

The light slip was probably meant to make the vases appear more valuable, perhaps by eliciting associations with ivory or marble. However, in no case was a vessel's entire surface covered in white slip. It has also been conjectured[2] that this form of painting emerged in order to emulate the more prestigious medium of wall painting, but the thesis has been elusive of proof. Furthermore, the group of five Huge Lekythoi (c. 70–100 cm high) are covered entirely in white slip, which suggests an imitation of marble lekythoi for funerary purposes.[3]

White-ground vase painting often occurred in association with red-figure vase painting. Especially typical of this are kylikes with a white-ground interior and a red-figure exterior image. White-ground painting is less durable than black- or red-figure, which is why such vases were primarily used as votives and grave vessels.

Types edit

 
Hera on the tondo of an Attic white-ground kylix (type IV) found at Vulci, by the Sabouroff Painter (c. 470 BC)

The development of white-ground vase painting took place parallel to that of the black- and red-figure styles. In the course of that development, five sub-styles can be noted:

 
Raging maenad by the Brygos Painter. She holds a thyrsos in her right hand, her left is swinging a panther through the air. A snake is winding through the diadem in her hair. Tondo of a kylix, 490–480 BCE. Staatliche Antikensammlungen, Munich.

Early use. The earliest surviving example of the technique is a fragmentary kantharos signed by the potter-painter Nearchos c. 570 BC . It was found on the Athenian Acropolis (Akropolis 611).[4] The technique was used to create strobing bands of colour that emphasize the shape of the vase.[5] and is associated with the workshops of Andokides, Nikosthenes and Psiax.[6]

Type I. The use of a white ground in conjunction with outline painting did not develop until some fifty years later, when black-figure vase painting on white ground was probably introduced by the potter Nikosthenes around 530/525 BC. After a short interval, this technique was also adopted by other workshops, including that of Psiax.[7] The manner of painting is the same as in conventional black-figure, the colour of the grounding being the only difference. The ground is rarely pure white, but usually slightly yellowish or light beige.

Type II. A second form is monochrome silhouette drawing. Images are not created from reservation (paint-free areas) and painted internal detail (as in red-figure vase painting), but from drawn outlines and painted internal detail. This style is used since the end of the 6th century BC, especially on cups, alabastra and lekythoi. Initially, the outline of the figures is executed in the form of a relief line, but from about 500 BC, this is increasingly replaced by painted yellowish-brown lines. The so-called "semi-outline" technique is a combination of the first and the second technique, used only in the first half of the 5th century BC, virtually exclusively on lekythoi and alabastra.

Type III. In the first quarter of the 5th century, the workshop of the potter Euphronios develops a four-colour painting style using a combination of shiny clay slip and mineral paints. The images are made up of outline drawings in shiny slip and coloured areas in mineral paint. This style is used especially on pyxides and cups. Some details, such as fruit, jewellery, weaponry or vessels can be executed in clay slip in such a fashion as to attain a slight plasticity, additionally they may be gilded. The paints used are limited to tones of red and brown, yellow, white and black.

Type IV. Early Classical lekythos painting combined shiny slip, mineral paints and non.ceramic mineral paints, This type developed in the second quarter of the 5th century BC. It was used in painting large grave lekythoi used in funerary cult. The images are mostly constructed of coloured areas. Pure outline drawing is only used for the depiction of male bodies at this stage. Female bodies are rendered in white paint, clothing in black shiny slip, mineral paints and occasionally non-ceramic paints such as cinnabarite or Egyptian blue. Many images depict scenes from women's life (the gynaikion). Grave images are rare. The most important representative of this style is the Achilles Painter.

Type V. The fifth style was polychrome lekythos painting. It replaced Early Classical lekythos painting around the middle of the 5th century BC. By this time, white-ground can be identified most closely with three principal shapes: the lekythos, the krater, and cups.[8] Black shiny slip and white paint now disappeared from the paintings. Female bodies were again rendered as simple outline drawings. Non-ceramic mineral paints also ceased to be used. At the same time, several painters, starting with the Sabouroff Painter, began to use red or blackish-grey matt paints, instead of shiny slip, for the contours. Only the contours are painted before firing, other paints are applied afterwards. Therefore, the durability of such vase paintings is very limited; many examples are badly preserved or completely worn. As a result, it is difficult to assess the depicted motifs. Grave scenes are predominant.

Painters and distribution edit

Important Classical white-ground painters (5th century BC), in addition to the Achilleus Painter and Sabouroff Painter, include the Sappho Painter, Thanatos Painter, Bird Painter, Square Painter, Women Painter, Phiale Painter, as well as several representatives of Group R (Reed Group), including its eponymous Reed Painter. By the end of the century, some first attempts at shaded painting can be observed, influenced probably by contemporaneous panel painting. Notable in this regard is the Group of the Huge Lekythoi, specialised in decorating large grave vessels. During the second half of the 5th century, white-ground vase painting was used nearly exclusively for grave lekythoi. When that vase type went out of use around 400 BC, white-ground vase painting also ceased.

Later, during the Hellenistic period, various types of white-ground pottery occur in several locations of the Greek World, sometimes painted monochrome, sometimes polychrome. They include Hâdra vases, Canosa Vases and vases of the Centuripe type. Lagynoi were often decorated in white-ground technique.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Apollo wearing a laurel or myrtle wreath, a white peplos and a red himation and sandals, seating on a lion-pawed diphros; he holds a chelys lyre in his left hand and pours a libation with his right hand. Facing him, a black bird identified as a pigeon, a jackdaw, a crow (which may allude to his love affair with Coronis) or a raven (a mantic bird). Tondo of an Attic white-ground kylix attributed to the Pistoxenos Painter (or the Berlin Painter, or Onesimos). Diam. 18 cm (7 in.)
  2. ^ See Tiverios and Tsiafakis, Color in Ancient Greece, 2002, for a survey of opinions on this.
  3. ^ Kurtz, Athenian White Lekythoi: Patterns and Painters, Oxford 1975, p.69-70; Schreiber, Athenian Vase Construction: A Potter's Analysis, Malibu 1999, p.183.
  4. ^ Cohen, Colors of Clay, 2006, p.187
  5. ^ Metropolitan Museum of Art 1926,26.49.
  6. ^ Cohen, op. cit., p.188
  7. ^ Cohen, op. cit., p.188
  8. ^ Cohen, op. cit., p.190

Bibliography edit

  • Donna Kurtz: Athenian White Lekythoi. Patterns and Painters, Clarendon Press, Oxford 1975.
  • Lévêque, Pierre; The Birth of Greece, "Abrams Discoveries" series, New York, 1994. ISBN 978-0-810-92843-5.
  • John Oakley: Picturing Death in Classical Athens. The Evidence of the White Lekythoi, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 2004. ISBN 0-521-82016-2.
  • E. Pottier, Étude sur les lécythes blancs antiques, 1883.
  • Schoder, Raymond V.; Masterpieces of Greek Art. New York Graphic Society.
  • Irma Wehgartner: Attisch weissgrundige Keramik. Maltechniken, Werkstätten, Formen, Verwendung, von Zabern, Mainz 1983 (Keramikforschungen, Vol 5). ISBN 3-8053-0565-6.
  • Irma Wehgartner: Weißgrundige Vasenmalerei. In: Der Neue Pauly, vol. 12, cols. 454–456.
  • Woodford, Susan; An Introduction to Greek Art, New York, 1988.
  • Von Bothmer, Dietrich (1987). Greek vase painting. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0870990845.

Further reading edit

  • Kurtz, Donna C. 1975. Athenian white lekythoi: Patterns and painters. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • MacDonald, Brian R. 1981. "The emigration of potters from Athens in the late fifth century BC and its effect on the Attic pottery industry". American Journal of Archaeology: 159–68.
  • Mertens, Joan R. 1974. "Attic white-ground cups: A special class of vases". Metropolitan Museum Journal 9: 91–108.
  • –––. 2006. "Attic White Ground: Potter and Painter". In The Colors of Clay: Special Techniques in Athenian Vases: 186–93.
  • Oakley, John H. 2004. Picturing death in Classical Athens: The evidence of the white lekythoi. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Truitt, Penelope. 1969. "Attic White-Ground Pyxis and Phiale, ca. 450 BC". Boston Museum Bulletin: 72–92.
  • Von Bothmer, Dietrich. 1972. "Greek vase painting: an introduction." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 31(1): 3–9.

white, ground, technique, style, white, ancient, greek, pottery, painting, which, figures, appear, white, background, developed, region, attica, dated, about, especially, associated, with, vases, made, ritual, funerary, only, because, painted, surface, more, f. White ground technique is a style of white ancient Greek pottery and the painting in which figures appear on a white background It developed in the region of Attica dated to about 500 BC It was especially associated with vases made for ritual and funerary use if only because the painted surface was more fragile than in the other main techniques of black figure and red figure vase painting Nevertheless a wide range of subjects are depicted Cylix of Apollo Attic c 460 BC Apollo pours a libation detail 1 Attic white ground lekythos type I depicting Heracles fighting Geryon Antonino Salinas Regional Archaeological Museum PalermoSpinning woman Attic oinochoe type III probably from Locri by the Brygos Painter c 490 BC Contents 1 Technique and style 2 Types 3 Painters and distribution 4 Notes 5 Bibliography 6 Further readingTechnique and style editFurther information Ancient Greek vase painting and Pottery of ancient Greece In white ground pottery the vase is covered with a light or white slip of kaolinite A similar slip had been used as carrier for vase paintings in the Geometric and Archaic periods White ground vases were produced for example in Ionia Laconia and on the Cycladic islands but only in Athens did it develop into a veritable separate style beside black figure and red figure vase painting For that reason the term white ground pottery or white ground vase painting is usually used in reference to the Attic material only The light slip was probably meant to make the vases appear more valuable perhaps by eliciting associations with ivory or marble However in no case was a vessel s entire surface covered in white slip It has also been conjectured 2 that this form of painting emerged in order to emulate the more prestigious medium of wall painting but the thesis has been elusive of proof Furthermore the group of five Huge Lekythoi c 70 100 cm high are covered entirely in white slip which suggests an imitation of marble lekythoi for funerary purposes 3 White ground vase painting often occurred in association with red figure vase painting Especially typical of this are kylikes with a white ground interior and a red figure exterior image White ground painting is less durable than black or red figure which is why such vases were primarily used as votives and grave vessels Types edit nbsp Hera on the tondo of an Attic white ground kylix type IV found at Vulci by the Sabouroff Painter c 470 BC The development of white ground vase painting took place parallel to that of the black and red figure styles In the course of that development five sub styles can be noted nbsp Raging maenad by the Brygos Painter She holds a thyrsos in her right hand her left is swinging a panther through the air A snake is winding through the diadem in her hair Tondo of a kylix 490 480 BCE Staatliche Antikensammlungen Munich Early use The earliest surviving example of the technique is a fragmentary kantharos signed by the potter painter Nearchos c 570 BC It was found on the Athenian Acropolis Akropolis 611 4 The technique was used to create strobing bands of colour that emphasize the shape of the vase 5 and is associated with the workshops of Andokides Nikosthenes and Psiax 6 Type I The use of a white ground in conjunction with outline painting did not develop until some fifty years later when black figure vase painting on white ground was probably introduced by the potter Nikosthenes around 530 525 BC After a short interval this technique was also adopted by other workshops including that of Psiax 7 The manner of painting is the same as in conventional black figure the colour of the grounding being the only difference The ground is rarely pure white but usually slightly yellowish or light beige Type II A second form is monochrome silhouette drawing Images are not created from reservation paint free areas and painted internal detail as in red figure vase painting but from drawn outlines and painted internal detail This style is used since the end of the 6th century BC especially on cups alabastra and lekythoi Initially the outline of the figures is executed in the form of a relief line but from about 500 BC this is increasingly replaced by painted yellowish brown lines The so called semi outline technique is a combination of the first and the second technique used only in the first half of the 5th century BC virtually exclusively on lekythoi and alabastra Type III In the first quarter of the 5th century the workshop of the potter Euphronios develops a four colour painting style using a combination of shiny clay slip and mineral paints The images are made up of outline drawings in shiny slip and coloured areas in mineral paint This style is used especially on pyxides and cups Some details such as fruit jewellery weaponry or vessels can be executed in clay slip in such a fashion as to attain a slight plasticity additionally they may be gilded The paints used are limited to tones of red and brown yellow white and black Type IV Early Classical lekythos painting combined shiny slip mineral paints and non ceramic mineral paints This type developed in the second quarter of the 5th century BC It was used in painting large grave lekythoi used in funerary cult The images are mostly constructed of coloured areas Pure outline drawing is only used for the depiction of male bodies at this stage Female bodies are rendered in white paint clothing in black shiny slip mineral paints and occasionally non ceramic paints such as cinnabarite or Egyptian blue Many images depict scenes from women s life the gynaikion Grave images are rare The most important representative of this style is the Achilles Painter Type V The fifth style was polychrome lekythos painting It replaced Early Classical lekythos painting around the middle of the 5th century BC By this time white ground can be identified most closely with three principal shapes the lekythos the krater and cups 8 Black shiny slip and white paint now disappeared from the paintings Female bodies were again rendered as simple outline drawings Non ceramic mineral paints also ceased to be used At the same time several painters starting with the Sabouroff Painter began to use red or blackish grey matt paints instead of shiny slip for the contours Only the contours are painted before firing other paints are applied afterwards Therefore the durability of such vase paintings is very limited many examples are badly preserved or completely worn As a result it is difficult to assess the depicted motifs Grave scenes are predominant nbsp Achilles and Ajax playing a board game Attic lekythos by the workshop of the Diosphos Painter c 500 BC nbsp White ground black figure oinochoe Wine Jug of Heracles and the Nemean lion Athens about 520 500 BC attributed to the Painter of London potted by Andokides nbsp Hypnos and Thanatos removing the body of Sarpedon from the battlefield of Troy lekythos Thanatos Painter c 440 BC nbsp Prothesis lying in repose Attic plychrome lekythos type V from Alopeke Group of the Huge Lekythoi late 5th century BC Painters and distribution editImportant Classical white ground painters 5th century BC in addition to the Achilleus Painter and Sabouroff Painter include the Sappho Painter Thanatos Painter Bird Painter Square Painter Women Painter Phiale Painter as well as several representatives of Group R Reed Group including its eponymous Reed Painter By the end of the century some first attempts at shaded painting can be observed influenced probably by contemporaneous panel painting Notable in this regard is the Group of the Huge Lekythoi specialised in decorating large grave vessels During the second half of the 5th century white ground vase painting was used nearly exclusively for grave lekythoi When that vase type went out of use around 400 BC white ground vase painting also ceased Later during the Hellenistic period various types of white ground pottery occur in several locations of the Greek World sometimes painted monochrome sometimes polychrome They include Hadra vases Canosa Vases and vases of the Centuripe type Lagynoi were often decorated in white ground technique Notes edit Apollo wearing a laurel or myrtle wreath a white peplos and a red himation and sandals seating on a lion pawed diphros he holds a chelys lyre in his left hand and pours a libation with his right hand Facing him a black bird identified as a pigeon a jackdaw a crow which may allude to his love affair with Coronis or a raven a mantic bird Tondo of an Attic white ground kylix attributed to the Pistoxenos Painter or the Berlin Painter or Onesimos Diam 18 cm 7 in See Tiverios and Tsiafakis Color in Ancient Greece 2002 for a survey of opinions on this Kurtz Athenian White Lekythoi Patterns and Painters Oxford 1975 p 69 70 Schreiber Athenian Vase Construction A Potter s Analysis Malibu 1999 p 183 Cohen Colors of Clay 2006 p 187 Metropolitan Museum of Art 1926 26 49 Cohen op cit p 188 Cohen op cit p 188 Cohen op cit p 190Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to White ground pottery Donna Kurtz Athenian White Lekythoi Patterns and Painters Clarendon Press Oxford 1975 Leveque Pierre The Birth of Greece Abrams Discoveries series New York 1994 ISBN 978 0 810 92843 5 John Oakley Picturing Death in Classical Athens The Evidence of the White Lekythoi Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2004 ISBN 0 521 82016 2 E Pottier Etude sur les lecythes blancs antiques 1883 Schoder Raymond V Masterpieces of Greek Art New York Graphic Society Irma Wehgartner Attisch weissgrundige Keramik Maltechniken Werkstatten Formen Verwendung von Zabern Mainz 1983 Keramikforschungen Vol 5 ISBN 3 8053 0565 6 Irma Wehgartner Weissgrundige Vasenmalerei In Der Neue Pauly vol 12 cols 454 456 Woodford Susan An Introduction to Greek Art New York 1988 Von Bothmer Dietrich 1987 Greek vase painting New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0870990845 Further reading editKurtz Donna C 1975 Athenian white lekythoi Patterns and painters Oxford Clarendon Press MacDonald Brian R 1981 The emigration of potters from Athens in the late fifth century BC and its effect on the Attic pottery industry American Journal of Archaeology 159 68 Mertens Joan R 1974 Attic white ground cups A special class of vases Metropolitan Museum Journal 9 91 108 2006 Attic White Ground Potter and Painter In The Colors of Clay Special Techniques in Athenian Vases 186 93 Oakley John H 2004 Picturing death in Classical Athens The evidence of the white lekythoi Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Truitt Penelope 1969 Attic White Ground Pyxis and Phiale ca 450 BC Boston Museum Bulletin 72 92 Von Bothmer Dietrich 1972 Greek vase painting an introduction The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 31 1 3 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title White ground technique amp oldid 1188181989, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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