
Stamnos - Wikipedia
A stamnos (Ancient Greek: στάμνος; plural stamnoi) is a type of ancient Greek vase used to serve and store liquids. Stamnoi have a wide mouth, a foot, and two handles, and were usually …
Stamnos (Mixing Jar) - The Art Institute of Chicago
With refined designs that are gracefully adapted to its shape, this stamnos is a fine example of red-figure painting during the Classical era. It retains its original lid, a rarity among ancient vases.
stamnos - British Museum
Pottery: red-figured stamnos. (a) The ship of Odysseus passing the Sirens. The sea is represented by a narrow space in the foreground shaded in thinned black, and with a wavy …
STAMNOS Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of STAMNOS is an ancient Greek wine jar with a wide mouth and with handles set horizontally on the shoulders.
Terracotta stamnos (jar) - The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Title: Terracotta stamnos (jar) Period: Classical. Date: early 5th century BCE. Culture: Greek, Attic. Medium: Terracotta; red-figure. Dimensions: Overall: 15 3/4 x 18 5/8in. (40 x 47.3cm) …
Stamnos - Attributed to the Chicago Painter — Google Arts & Culture
It is uncertain whether the three stately figures on one side, shown participating in rites honoring Dionysos, are Greek women or maenads, female followers of the wine god. The subject at left...
Stamnos - Archaeologs
The stamnos (pl. stamnoi; possibly connected with Greek histemi - I set up) is a broad-shouldered, round-shaped vessel, with a low foot and a low neck. Its two horizontal handles …
1913.9 | Antiquity and America
Regardless, the stamnos serves as a reflection of the influence of Greek vase painting on the Italian Peninsula and represents an important category of ancient Mediterranean vessels that …
Stamnos (Mixing Jar) | The Art Institute of Chicago
The stamnos (mixing jar) has a wide mouth that facilitates mixing. Its pair of side handles allowed for two decorative fields of equal size, one on the front and one on the back. The stamnos was …
Chicago Painter - The Art Institute of Chicago
The stamnos at the Art Institute, along with others that he decorated, depicts scenes related to the cult of the wine god Dionysos, highlighting his uncluttered, elegant signature style.