Red-figured Hydria - Dance Training Session

Illustration

Nathalie Choubineh
by The Trustees of The British Museum
published on 07 October 2020
Red-figured Hydria - Dance Training Session Download Full Size Image

Red-figured hydria (water-jar) displaying a dance-training (gymnopaida) session. Two young girls practice dancing under the supervision of a female and a male tutor. The girls wear short tunics (chiton) and take identical steps towards each other, hands on hips, a movement reserved for solo-dancing in ancient Greece. Their heads are turned towards their tutors, who are both dressed elaborately with crowns on their heads, suggesting the high status of teachers in classical Athens. The words kale and kalos (meaning “beautiful”) is inscribed, respectively, above the heads of the girls and the male instructor, who may use his stick to tap the dance beats. The horseshoe-shaped lyre, decorated with two eyes, hung on a corner, symbolises music.
Hydriai were vessels for carrying and keeping water. They were mostly used by women. Therefore, many of them are decorated with paintings about women’s life. This hydria was made in Attica, Greece, around 425 to 450 BCE, and found in Capua, Italy. It is painted by The Phiale Painter, a prominent artist of red-figure technique.

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APA Style

Museum, T. T. o. T. B. (2020, October 07). Red-figured Hydria - Dance Training Session. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/image/12861/red-figured-hydria---dance-training-session/

Chicago Style

Museum, The Trustees of The British. "Red-figured Hydria - Dance Training Session." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified October 07, 2020. https://www.worldhistory.org/image/12861/red-figured-hydria---dance-training-session/.

MLA Style

Museum, The Trustees of The British. "Red-figured Hydria - Dance Training Session." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 07 Oct 2020. Web. 15 Apr 2024.

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