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  2. Harvester Vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvester_Vase

    Minoan. The Harvester Vase is a Late Bronze Age stone rhyton, dating to about 1550 to 1500 BC, found at Hagia Triada, an ancient "palace" of the Minoan civilization in Crete. It is now in the Heraklion Archaeological Museum, and is an important example of Minoan art from the Neopalatial Period . The vase was made in three parts, of which the ...

  3. Piranesi Vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piranesi_Vase

    The Piranesi Vase or Boyd Vase is a reconstructed, colossal marble calyx krater from ancient Rome, on three legs and a triangular base, with a relief around the sides of the vase. It is 107 inches (2.71m) tall and 28 inches (0.71m) in diameter. The upper part is in the style of the Borghese Vase. The lower part, which was not original, was ...

  4. Fish plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_plate

    For the connection bar used in railways, see Fishplate. A fish plate is a Greek pottery vessel used by western, Hellenistic Greeks during the fourth century BC. Although invented in fifth-century BC Athens, most of the corpus of surviving painted fish plates originate in Southern Italy, where fourth-century BC Greek settlers, called " Italiotes ...

  5. Pueblo pottery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pueblo_pottery

    Pueblo pottery are ceramic objects made by the Indigenous Pueblo people and their antecedents, the Ancestral Puebloans and Mogollon cultures in the Southwestern United States and Northern Mexico. [1] For centuries, pottery has been central to pueblo life as a feature of ceremonial and utilitarian usage.

  6. Marsyas Painter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marsyas_Painter

    Marsyas Painter. The Marsyas Painter was an ancient Greek vase painter of the red-figure style active in Attica between 370 and 340/330 BC. The Marsyas Painter is sometimes considered the best of the Attic red-figure painters of the late 4th-century Kerch Style . His conventional name is derived from the depiction of Marsyas on a pelike, now on ...

  7. Sunflowers (Van Gogh series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sunflowers_(Van_Gogh_series)

    Sunflowers. Sunflowers (original title, in French: Tournesols) is the title of two series of still life paintings by the Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh. The first series, executed in Paris in 1887, depicts the flowers lying on the ground, while the second set, made a year later in Arles, shows a bouquet of sunflowers in a vase.