Magna Graecia, Apulia, Canosan Hellenistic Period, ca. 3rd century BCE. A mold-made ceramic figure of a woman, shown standing on an integrated square plinth. She holds one hand to her breast, the other hanging down at her side. She wears a long white himation with a draped layer that hangs to her waist with a thick, painted hem. Atop her head is a conical headdress. Her face has smooth features that suggest a generic youthful woman rather than an individual. Canosa, or Canosion as it was known then, was a major center of the ceramics and pottery trade when it was a Greek polis. It produced truly unique pottery, completely different in decoration style (although not in shape) from earlier and neighboring traditions. The clay is buff, with the decoration applied directly to it without the use of slip. The entire body was covered with white slip, with a second ground of other colors applied over the background to create colorful items and/or details. This was a votive figure for a tomb, perhaps representing a mourner. Size: 3.2" W x 10.4" H (8.1 cm x 26.4 cm)
Provenance: ex-private Healy collection, Studio City, California, USA, acquired in the 2000s
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#149852
Condition
Repaired from four or five pieces around the midsection. Repairs are well done and generally difficult to see, although one is clearly visible.