BRYGOS


Meaning of BRYGOS in English

also spelled Brygus, signature appearing on several cups and vases of Greek red-figure pottery executed in the late 6th or early 5th century BC. Because it is not known whether the signature is that of the potter or of the painter, the artisans are called, by convention, the Brygos Potter and the Brygos Painter. Sack of Troy, detail of the Brygos Cup, a kylix decorated by the Brygos Painter, The Brygos Painter is best known for a kylix (drinking cup), frequently called the Brygos Cup, now in the Louvre, Paris (see photograph). A work of about 490 BC, it depicts the Iliupersis (Sack of Troy). Several other vessels thought to have been decorated by the Brygos Painter include a kylix, Youth Carrying a Skyphos, a cup, Dionysus with a Troop of Maenads and Satyrs, and a cup, Satyrs Attacking Iris and Hera. The Brygos Painter is known for drinking-party scenes as well as more formal mythological scenes. The naturalness of his forms and the flow of his draperies are consonant with the early Classical period in ancient Greece.

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