Description:
This is a delightful black-glazed pottery skyphos from the south Italian region of Apulia. The body has a polychrome decoration between the handles with a design in red and white with ochre wash. There is a series of white and red bands and a small tongue design with a medallion in the middle, a stripe and dots pattern on the reverse.
The decoration is typical for pottery which is commonly called Gnathian, after the name of present-day Egnazia (located on the Adriatic coast of Apulia). In the middle of the nineteenth century large quantities of pottery with this type of decoration were found during excavations of the cemeteries of Egnazia (and nearby Fasano). Ever since they were known as the pottery of Egnazia, or Gnathia pottery, even though little of it was in fact made at Egnazia.
Literature:
J. Richard Green, "Gnathia and Other Overpainted Wares of Italy and Sicily: a Survey", in Évelyne Geny (ed., sous la direction de Pierre Lévêque et Jean-Paul Morel), Céramiques Hellénistiques et Romaines III (Besançon, Presses Universitaires Franc-Comtoises, 2001), 57-103; J. Richard Green, "The Gnathia Pottery of Apulia", in: Margaret Ellen Mayo - Kenneth Hamma (eds.), The Art of South Italy. Vases from Magna Graecia (Richmond, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, 1982), p. 252-258.
Dating:
Circa 4th - 3rd century B.C.
Size:
height 8.6 cm.
Provenance:
From the collection of Dr. Angelo R. Bergamo, New Jersey, 1970s; ex Harmer Rooke Galleries, New York; with Arte Primitivo, New York, 15 March 2004, part of lot 535; apparently before also with Sotheby’s, since the skyphos contains a Sotheby’s label (reading "Sotheby’s Arcade Auctions, 665/3"; the Arcade Auctions were introduced in 1981), but this label is without a date so it is not possible to verify this.
Condition:
Intact, with some minor wear and paint loss, some minuscule chips to rim ad foot and some of the usual wear, minor scratches and other damage to the surface, all as shown on the photographs.
Price
€ 600
Stock number:
C1378