Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Oltos

 

( fl c. 525-c. 500 BC). Greek vase painter. He was an important early Athenian Red-figure artist. He apparently trained in the workshop of NIKOSTHENES and initially specialized in bilingual eye cups, decorating more extant specimens than any other artist. Indeed, most of his over 150 surviving works are cups, including the two potted by Euxitheos that bear Oltos' painter-signature (Berlin, Pergamonmus., 2269; Tarquinia, Pal. Vitelleschi, RC 6848). He was particularly influenced by the earliest Red-figure artists, the ANDOKIDES PAINTER and PSIAX, while his Black-figure output recalls Psiax in motif and the ANTIMENES PAINTER in style. Oltos employed Black-figure exclusively for scenes on eye-cup tondos, such as the Running Dionysos Carrying a Rhyton and Vine (Rome, Vatican, Mus. Gregoriano Etrus. 498) or the Spear-bearing Trumpeters (Rome, Vatican, Mus. Gregoriano Etrus., 46; Bryn Mawr Coll., PA, Riegal Mem. Mus.), using fine incision and substantial added red. Between the large eyes on the cups' exteriors he painted Red-figure trumpeters, warriors, athletes, women, beasts, plants or inanimate objects. The genre suited his forthright, repetitive style.

Part of the Vase painters family

See the Abbreviations for further details.



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Oltos
Top
Eurystheus hiding in a jar as Herakles brings him the Erymanthian boar. Side A from a red-figure kylix by Oltos, ca. 510 BC, Paris, Louvre (G17).

Oltos was a Late Archaic Greek vase painter, active in Athens. From the time between 525 BC and 500 BC, about 150 works by him are known. Two pieces, "bowl F 2264" (Berlin, Antikensammlung) and "bowl RC 6848" (Tarquinia (Museo Nazionale Tarquiniese), are signed by him.

Oltos began his career in the workshop of the potter Nikosthenes. Initially, he mainly painted bilingual vases or bowls with interior black-figure and exterior red-figure decoration. His black-figure style was influenced by Psiax and the Antimenes Painter. No pure black-figure works by Oltos are known so far. His tondos usually depict a single figure. They are often full of tension, frequently with differential directions of gaze and movement. Later, he exclusively engaged in red-figure painting, influenced especially by the Andokides Painter as well as several members of the Pioneer Group, especially his former pupil Euphronios.

His drawing style was spacious and elegant, but never reached the depth of detail of his most important contemporary masters. He had a distinctive tendency towards luxurious ornamentation and symmetric compositions. In the middle of his career he concentrated especially on the depiction of mythological scenes. Over time, he worked with several different potters. We know of at least six: Hischylos, most importantly Pamphaios, with whom he created the earliest known stamnos, Tleson, Chelis, and finally Kachrylion, for whom he worked together with Euphronios, as well as Euxitheos.

An innovation introduced by Oltos is found on an amphora at London (British Museum E 259). Here, he depicts a single figure, with no frame or floor line.

Selected works

Dionysos, interior image from a bilingual cup (A), Munich, Staatliche Antikensammlungen (Inv. 2593).
Athena and Enkelados in combat, red-figure plate, Louvre CA 3662.

Bibliography

  • Joachim Harnecker: Oltos. Untersuchungen zu Themenwahl und Stil eines früh-rotfigurigen Schalenmalers, Lang, Frankfurt a. M. u. a. 1992, ISBN 3-631-43755-2
This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the German Wikipedia.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Vase Painters (art)
Kachrylion
Nikosthenes

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Oltos" Read more