Description
Comparison with better-preserved vases—and with other artworks and monuments, such as the famous Siphnian Treasury at Delphi—helps to fill in some of the action no longer surviving from the rest of this vase, which once showed Apollo and Herakles struggling for the Delphic tripod. One claw-footed leg of the tripod survives, across the chest of Zeus, the bearded figure who intervened to stop the quarrel between two of his sons. Apollo is the unbearded figure at left, while Herakles would have appeared beyond the break on the right.
Provenance
Through Harold Woodbury Parsons, New York, NY, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art (1915); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1915-)
Fragment from Black-Figure Neck-Amphora of Panathenaic Shape (Storage Vessel): Apollo and Zeus
c. 520 BCE
Accession Number
1915.533.a
Medium
ceramic
Dimensions
Overall: 1.2 x 0.7 cm (1/2 x 1/4 in.)
Classification
Ceramic
Credit Line
Gift of the John Huntington Art and Polytechnic Trust
Related Artworks
Fragment from Black-Figure Neck-Amphora of Panathenaic Shape (Storage Vessel): Apollo with Lyre
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Black-Figure Hydria (Water Vessel): Frontal Quadriga (Body); Theseus and Minotaur (Shoulder)
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Apothecary's Bottle
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