[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 269

Rim fragment. Reserved line on inside at rim; narrow band 0.037 below rim. Max. dim. 0.07. W. B. Dinsmoor, Hesperia Suppl. V, p. 142, figs. 69:30, 70:b; Agora XXI, cat. no. L 5, p. 90, pl. 56. Below torus, ... Ca. 450 B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 270

Fragment of cul and body. Max. dim. 0.09. On cul, chain of double lotuses and encircled palmettes. The only painter to favor the chain of double lotuses and palmettes on the culs of his calyx-kraters ... Ca. 450 B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 271

Fragment of cul with start of handle at far right. Glaze much pitted. Max. dim. 0.087. Chain of double lotuses and encircled palmettes. For this pattern on the culs of other calyx-kraters, see 270 ... Ca. 450 B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 286

Three non-joining wall fragments. Reserved band on inside at top of P 110. Max. dim. P 104: 0.103, P 110: 0.087, P 2223: 0.07. Prange, Niobidenmaler, p. 209, cat. no. GN 15, pl. 21 (P 110 is mispoised) ... Ca. 450 B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 294

Wall fragment. Max. dim. 0.041. The fragment preserves the bared right shoulder, start of arm, and a bit of the drapery of a male figure. Not from the same bell-krater as 293. The drawing on 294 is looser ... Probably mid-5th century B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 307

Wall fragment with start of return just below rim. Narrow reserved band on inside. Glaze much pitted. Max. dim. 0.04. Satyr (most of wreathed head) to right, playing the aulos (one of his fingers appears ... Probably mid-5th century B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 558

Wall fragment. Burned (clay is gray). Glazed misfired reddish brown on outside. Max. dim. 0.06. Pelias and daughters. The fragment shows the cauldron with the foreparts of the ram (head missing). On the ... Probably mid-5th century B.C.

[Agora Object] Agora XXX, no. 559

Wall fragment. Reddish brown glaze on inside. Max. dim. 0.069. Man (part of right side) dressed in a himation, seated to right on a klismos. Behind him, part of a figure (drapery). Preliminary sketch ... Probably mid-5th century B.C.