Skip to content

Black-Figure Eye Cup: Iris and Satyrs (A, B); Gorgoneion (I)

Creator Name

--

Cultural Context

Greek, Attic

Date

Creation: c. 520–510 BCE

About the Work

Cleveland Museum of Art Object Description
Along with two large sets of eyes on its exterior, this drinking vessel also features other figures: a winged female, probably Iris, between each pair of eyes, and pairs of satyrs flanking them; a winged dolphin beneath each handle; and a frontal Gorgoneion, or face of Medusa, baring her teeth and tongue within the tondo. Although the eyes and Gorgoneion may serve to ward off evil, they also make for fluid identities while drinking, inviting drinkers to enter the mythical realm. For when tilting such cups to imbibe, drinkers confront monstrous beings while simultaneously masking their faces from others.

Work details

"--" = no data available
Curationist Logo= Curationist added metadata

Title

Black-Figure Eye Cup: Iris and Satyrs (A, B); Gorgoneion (I)

Creator

--

Worktype

Ceramic

Cultural Context

Greek, Attic

Material

ceramic

Dimensions

Diameter: 21.3 cm (8 3/8 in.)

Technique

--

Language

--

Date

Creation: c. 520–510 BCE

Provenance

Adolf Preyes, Munich, Germany, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art, ?-1926; The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 1926-; Purchase from the J. H. Wade Fund

Style Period

--

Rights

Curationist Logo
CC0
CC0

Inscription

--

Location

--

Subjects

--

Topic

--

Related Content

--

All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:

Black-Figure Eye Cup: Iris and Satyrs (A, B); Gorgoneion (I), c. 520–510 BCE, Cleveland Museum of Art. CC0.

Help us improve this content!

Let our archivists know if you have something to add.

Save this work.

Start an account to add this work to your personal curated collection.
masonry card