Douris and the Painters of Greek Vases: (Illustrated Edition)
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Douris is a painter on Greek vases with red figures , active from 500 to 460 BC. AD
It is characterized by a loaded ornamentation and by the diversity of border patterns. The favorite subjects are banquets, komoi (processions of drunk people) or warriors. The favorite kalos name is Khærestratos. Beazley suggests that at that time, Douris could have worked side by side with Onésimos, another great painter of cups of the period. Compared to the latter, Douris favors the grace of his characters.
This is the most characteristic phase of Douris, and its peak. The medallion borders are characterized by the alternation of a meander element and tiles; palmettes decorate the handles of the cup. The preferred kalos name is now Hippodamas; signatures are becoming scarce. Douris returns to banquet scenes, and is also interested in warrior studies and school scenes. The masterpiece of the period is the cup known as the "pietà of Memnon": Eos takes away the body of his son Memnon , killed by Achilles during the Trojan War.
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Douris and the Painters of Greek Vases - Edmond Pottier
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Douris and the Painters of Greek Vases, by Edmond Pottier, Translated by Bettina Kahnweiler
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Title: Douris and the Painters of Greek Vases
Author: Edmond Pottier
Release Date: December 27, 2019 [eBook #61034]
Language: English
Character set encoding: UTF-8
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DOURIS AND THE PAINTERS OF GREEK VASES***
E-text prepared by
Turgut Dincer, Charlie Howard,
and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
from page images generously made available by
Internet Archive
(https://archive.org)
DOURIS AND THE PAINTERS OF
GREEK VASES
Fig. 1. KANTHAROS AND KYLIX (Cup).
By Douris. Brussels and Louvre Museums.
DOURIS
AND THE PAINTERS
OF GREEK VASES
BY EDMOND POTTIER
MEMBRE DE L’INSTITUT
TRANSLATED BY
BETTINA KAHNWEILER
WITH A PREFACE BY
JANE ELLEN HARRISON
HON.D.LITT.DURHAM, HON.LL.D.ABERDEEN
LONDON
JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W.
1909
DEDICATED
IN LOVE AND GRATITUDE TO
AUGUST LEWIS
PREFACE
The
translator of M. Pottier’s monograph on Douris has kindly asked me to write, by way of preface, a few words on the relation of Greek vase-painting to Greek literature and to Greek mythology. I do this with the more pleasure because this relation has, I think, been somewhat seriously misunderstood, and M. Pottier’s delightful monograph which, thanks to Miss Kahnweiler, is now given to us in English form, should do much to clear away misconception and to set the matter before us in a light at once juster and more vivid.
* * * * *
First let us consider for a moment the relation between Greek art and Greek literature.
In classical matters we are all of us, scholars and students alike, bred up in a tradition that is literary. Our earliest contact with the Greek mind is through Greek poets, historians, philosophers. This is well, for these remain—all said—the supreme revelation. But this priority of literary contact begets, almost inevitably, a certain confusion of thought. Bred as we are in a literary tradition, we come later to be confronted with other utterances of the Greek mind, for example graphic art—vase-painting. This we naturally seek to relate to our earlier and purely literary conceptions. What has come to us second we instinctively make subordinate, ancillary. Greek art, and especially what we call a minor art,
such as vase-painting, is the hand-maid
of Greek poetry, or, to drop metaphor, the function of Greek art, is, we think, to illustrate Greek literature. Public and publisher alike demand nowadays that books on Greek literature, on Greek mythology, even editions of Greek plays, should be illustrated
from Greek art.
By illustration is meant translation, the transference with the minimum of alteration of an idea expressed in one art into the medium of another. Were it possible in a work of art to separate the idea expressed from the form in which it is expressed, such transference might be an eligible and even elegant pastime. But every one knows that such separation of idea and form is in art impossible. Translation of poetry from one language to another is precarious, a thing only to be attempted by a poet; translation from one art to another is a task so inherently barren that the Greek, till his decadence, left it, instinctively, unattempted.
Against the poison of this illustration
theory M. Pottier’s monograph is the best antidote, and all students of the Greek mind will be grateful to Miss Kahnweiler for making his monograph more easily accessible. M. Pottier focuses our attention on the personal artist, a man not intent on illustrating
another man’s work, but on producing works of art of his own. Douris uses sometimes the same material as Homer or Arktinos, but he shapes it to his own decorative ends; he draws his inspiration naturally and necessarily rather from graphic than from literary tradition.
* * * * *
Beneath the illustration
fallacy there lurks, as regards mythology, another and a subtler misconception.
Until quite recent years mythology has been again to scholars and students alike, a thing of mythological allusions,
a matter to be looked up
with a view to the elucidation of obscure passages in Pindar or dramatic choruses. Even nowadays mythology remains, to many a well-furnished scholar, a sort of by-product, an elegant outgrowth of the Greek mind, a thing merely poetical,
by which he means having no touch with reality. Or, at best, if the scholar be himself a poet, he loves mythology without analysing it, he feels it as a dream that haunts, a thing that attends and allures him through the waste places of scholarship, more real and more abiding than any realism, a thing to him so intimate that he does not ask the why of it.
Thanks to the impact of another study, anthropology, we are awake now and look at mythology with other eyes. We know that mythology is not a last, lovely, literary flower, but a thing primitive, deep-seated, long antedating anything that can be called literature, not a separate subject
at all, but rather a mode of thinking common at an early stage to all subjects. Mythology is not the outcome of an idle, vagrant fancy, but a necessary step in the evolution of human thought; a strenuous step taken by man towards knowledge, towards the fashioning and ordering of the world of mental conceptions. Mythology is the mother-earth out of which for the Greeks grow those stately, fruit-bearing trees, literature, art, history, philosophy. A Greek vase-painter does not illustrate
mythology, he utters it in line and colour as the poet utters it in words and rhythm.
Take a simple instance from the work of Douris, the kylix in the Louvre, in the centre of which is painted Eos carrying the body of Memnon.
The mythologist, that is man in his early days of thinking, cannot conceive or name the abstract, empty dawn.
The glow of morning is to him the print of unearthly yet human fingers. He images dawn
as Dawn,
in terms of humanity, that is of the one and only thing he inwardly felt and knew—himself. The dawn is for him a beautiful woman, and to complete her humanity, she is a mother. Literature, which is at first but story-telling, took up the tale, and knew that Eos the Dawn who rose in the East had a child of the East for her son, and mourned for him in his death, and carried him away for his