ITEM: Piriform aryballos
MATERIAL: Pottery
CULTURE: Greek, Proto-Corinthian
PERIOD: 7th – 6th Century B.C
DIMENSIONS: 65 mm x 40 mm
CONDITION: Good condition
PROVENANCE: Ex Swiss private collection, H. D., acquired between 1919 - 2019
Comes with Certificate of Authenticity and Export Licence. If you are from outside the European Union, we will have to apply for the export licence again for your country, this takes 3 to 5 weeks and has a cost of 5% of the hammer price, this amount will be added to the final invoice.
The aryballos (pl. aryballoi) has a small round or ovoid body and a narrow neck. The typically broad and flat lip prevents spillage. The use of the Greek term aryballos for this particular shape is a modern convention. It may well have been used in antiquity, but we know that other names, such as lekythos, were also applied.
Aryballoi are common in Corinthian ware, some being tiny and meticulously decorated. Examples are less widespread in Athenian, although the shape is depicted on vases or funerary stelai, either hanging up, often with a strigil or sponge in an athletic setting, or being used by the athletes themselves.
In Corinth and East Greece, warrior’s heads, animals, and other mould-made figures could serve as the body of aryballoi. Athenian potters sustain the habit, and there are examples in the form of female heads, shells, even genitals.
Price realized | 220 EUR |
Starting price | 220 EUR |
Estimate | 600 EUR |