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  2. Pottery of ancient Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pottery_of_ancient_Greece

    As the culture recovered Sub-Mycenaean pottery finally blended into the Protogeometric style, which begins Ancient Greek pottery proper. [citation needed] The rise of vase painting saw increasing decoration. Geometric art in Greek pottery was contiguous with the late Dark Age and early Archaic Greece, which saw the rise of the Orientalizing period.

  3. Hellenistic art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hellenistic_art

    Hellenistic art is the art of the Hellenistic period generally taken to begin with the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC and end with the conquest of the Greek world by the Romans, a process well underway by 146 BC, when the Greek mainland was taken, and essentially ending in 30 BC with the conquest of Ptolemaic Egypt following the Battle of Actium.

  4. West Slope Ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Slope_Ware

    Three Ancient Greek kantharoi vessels in the so-called "West Slope Style", dating from 275 to 260 BC, in the Ancient Agora Museum in Athens. The modern term West Slope pottery describes a type of Greek fine pottery from the Late Classical and Hellenistic periods. Two kantharoi in the Agora Museum at Athens, circa 225-210 BC.

  5. Ancient Greek art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_art

    In the Hellenistic period a wider range of pottery was produced, but most of it is of little artistic importance. White ground, Attic, c. 460 BC, Cylix of Apollo, who pours a libation, detail. [11] In earlier periods even quite small Greek cities produced pottery for their own locale. These varied widely in style and standards.

  6. Greek terracotta figurines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_terracotta_figurines

    By the Hellenistic era, the figurines became grotesques: deformed beings with disproportionate heads, sagging breasts or prominent bellies, hunchbacks and bald men. Grotesques were a speciality of the city of Smyrna, but also produced throughout the Greek world, including in Tarsus and Alexandria.

  7. Typology of Greek vase shapes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typology_of_Greek_vase_shapes

    The pottery of ancient Greece has a long history and the form of Greek vase shapes has had a continuous evolution from Minoan pottery down to the Hellenistic period.

  8. White-ground technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/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 ...

  9. Fish plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_plate

    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," manufactured them.

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