Hermonax
Hermonax was a Greek vase painter working in the red-figure style. He painted between c. 470 and 440 BC in Athens. Ten vases signed with the phrase "Hermonax has painted it" survive, mainly stamnoi and lekythoi. He is generally a painter of large pots, though some cups survive.
Background
[edit]Forming the beginning of the 'early classic' generation of vase-painters, Hermonax was a pupil of the Berlin Painter and a contemporary of the Providence Painter. Sir John Beazley attributed just over 150 vases to his hand. His work has been found all over the ancient Greek world from Marseille to Southern Russia.
Hermonax entered the Berlin Painter's workshop towards its end. As a pupil of the Berlin Painter Hermonax adopted the practice of painting large figural scenes on large vessels. His meander patterns, unlike those of his master, can be careless, as with the Providence Painter. A characteristic of his style is his depiction of the eyes with a concave bottom and a convex top.
The largest share of Hermonax' surviving work depicts Dionysiac themes.
Appraisal
[edit]As Beazley states, "Sound and able as Hermonax's work generally is, he only once shows himself a remarkable artist, and that is not on any of his signed vases, but on the Munich stamnos...with the Birth of Erichthonios - Hauser has pointed out what was modern in that vase when it was painted; how the painter rejects the old-fashioned agreements of figure, face, and dress, and turns to a new kind of simplicity and truthfulness: new in his day, and fresh still, because the artist put his own thought, his own feeling into his shapes, and that keeps them alive and green."
As the 'brother' of the Providence Painter, he is seen as less technically proficient.
Selected works
[edit]- Adria, Museo Civico
- fragments of a bowl B 34 • fragments of a bowl B 296 • fragments of a bowl B 785
- Agrigento, Museo Archeologico Regionale
- lekythos
- Altenburg, Staatliches Lindenau-Museum
- Ancona, Museo Archeologico Nazionale
- two fragments of different bowls
- Argos, Archaeological Museum
- bell krater C 909
- Athens, Agora Museum
- fragment of a loutrophoros P 15018 • hydria P 25101 • fragment of a stamnos P 25357 • fragment P 25357 A • fragment of a krater P 30017 • fragment of a bell krater P 30019 • fragment of a bowl CP 11948 • fragment of a lekythos P 30065 • fragment of a hydria P 30134 • fragments of a pelike P 8959
- Athens, Acropolis Museum
- fragments of several loutrophoroi
- fragment 2.692 • lekythos 1632
- amphora 48.55
- Barcelona, Museo Arqueologico
- lekythos 581 • fragment of a bowl 4233.6
- Basel, Antikenmuseum Basel and Sammlung Ludwig
- pelike BS 483 • oinochoe KA 430
- pelike 26454
- Bologna, Museo Civico Archeologico
- oinochoe 344
- stamnos 01.8031
- Boulogne, Musée Communal
- amphora 125
- hydria H 4631
- pelike A 1579 • hydria A 3098
- fragment of a bowl P 199 • fragment of a bowl P 209 • fragment of a bowl P 989
- fragment of a bowl 1995.18.42
- Catania, Museo Civico
- hydria 706
- pelike 171
- amphora
- amphora 308
- Columbia, Missouri, Museum of Art & Archeology
- amphora 83.187
- Corinth, Archaeological Museum
- fragment of a krater C 66.40
- fragment of a bowl
- Ferrara, Museo Nazionale di Spina
- oinochoe 2461 • oinochoe B 31.5.1958 • lekanis T0 • oinochoe T 216 CVP • oinochoe T 607 • oinochoe T 897
- Florence, Museo Archeologico Etrusco
- fragment of a stamnos 14B5 • fragment 14B53 • stamnos 3995 • fragment of a stamnos PD 421
- Gela, Museo Archeologico
- lekythos N 115
- Glasgow, Museum & Art Gallery
- pelike 1883.32A
- Gotha, Schlossmuseum
- amphora 50
- fragment of a bowl H 74
- lekythos 1930.184
- fragment of a stamnos 170 • pelike 171 • fragment of a lekythos 172 • fragment of a bowl 173
- fragment of a bowl II.12.66 • fragment of a bowl II.12.67
- fragment A 33.2322 • fragment of a bowl A 33.2350
- Karlsruhe, Badisches Landesmuseum
- fragment of a bowl 69.35C • two fragments of a bowl 86.360 A-B • fragment of a bowl 69.35 C
- amphora T 696
- Lancut, Castle Museum
- neck amphora S 8176
- London, British Museum
- amphora E 312 • pelike E 371 • pelike P 374 • stamnos E 445
- London, Victoria & Albert Museum
- hydria 4816.1858
- Los Angeles, County Museum of Art
- pelike A 5933.50.41
- Madrid, Museo Arqueológico Nacional
- amphora 11098 • amphora L 172
- fragment of a pelike (?) 144
- Manchester, City Art Gallery & Museum
- pelike III.I.41
- Mannheim, Reiss-Museum
- stamnos 59
- Marseilles, Musée Borely
- stamnos 1630 • pelike 3592 • pelike 7023
- Melfi, Museo Nazionale del Melfese
- amphora (loan → Metaponto)
- Metaponto, Museo Civico
- amphora 20113
- fragment of a bowl RS 470
- Moscow, Pushkin Museum
- amphora 601 • amphora 1071
- stamnos 2413 • lekythos 2477 • lekythos 2478
- Münster, Archaeological Museum of Münster University
- lekythos 668
- amphora 81481 • amphora H 3385 • pelike SP 2028
- Naples, Palazzo di San Nicandro (Museo Mustilli)
- pelike
- lekythos 26.60.77 • lekythos 41.162.19 • bowl 1972.70.2 • fragment of a bowl 1972.257 • fragment of a bowl 1973.175.4A-B
- amphora 36.96
- Orvieto, Museo Civico (Collezione Faina)
- bowl 43 • lekythos 66 A
- amphora 1966.500
- Paestum, Museo Archeologico Nazionale
- oinochoe 57799
- Palermo, Collezione Collisani
- amphora R 33
- Palermo, Museo Archeologico Regionale
- lekythos 1445 • lekythos V 672
- lekythos 489
- Paris, Musée National du Louvre
- pelike CP 10765 • fragment of a pelike CP 10766 • bowl CP 10955 • fragment of a pelike CP 11060 • fragment CP 11061 • fragment of a pelike CP 11064 • fragment of a stamnos CP 11065 • fragment of a stamnos CP 11067 • fragment CP 11068 • fragment of a bowl CP 11944 • fragment of a bowl CP 11945 • fragment of a bowl CP 11946 • fragment of a bowl CP 11947 • fragment of a bowl CP 11948 • fragment of a bowl CP 11949 • fragment of a bowl CP 11950 • fragment of a bowl CP 11951 • fragment of a bowl CP 11952 • fragment of a bowl CP 11953 • fragment of a bowl CP 11954 • bowl G 268 • stamnos G 336 • pelike G 374 • amphora G 376 • stamnos 413 • stamnos G 416 • pelike G 546 • oinochoe G 573
- Rhodes, Archaeological Museum
- hydria 12884
- Rome, Museo Nazionale di Villa Giulia
- stamnos 5241 • pelike (Beazley Nr. 33) • pelike 50459
- Samothrace, Archaeological Museum
- fragment of a bell krater
- amphora WU 3271 [1]
- amphora 12359
- amphora 696 • pelike 727 • stamnos 804 • stamnos 2070 • stamnos 4121 • fragment of a stamnos NB 6463 • amphora ST 1461 • amphora 1672 • amphora ST 1692 • stamnos ST 1694
- Sarajevo, Zemaljski muzej Bosne i Hercegovine
- fragment of a hydria 31 • loutrophoros 389 • fragment of a loutrophoros 425 • fragment of a loutrophoros 426
- Stockholm, Medelhavsmuseum
- bowl G2334
- Syracuse, Museo Archeologico Regionale Paolo Orsi
- lekythos 24552
- kylix 86.89
- Trieste, Museo Storia ed Arte
- stamnos S 424
- fragment of a bowl E 43 • fragment of a loutrophoros E 90 • fragment of a loutrophoros E 99 • fragment of a pelike S101583
- Vatican City, Museo Gregoriano Etrusco Vaticano
- stamnos 16526
- pelike 336 • pelike 1095 • pelike IV 3728
- Vienna, Vienna University
- fragment of a bowl 503.50 • fragment
- Wiesbaden, Landesamt
- amphora
- Würzburg, Martin von Wagner Museum
- fragment of a stamnos 3550 • bowl L 95
Bibliography
[edit]- Hanns E. Langenfass: Hermonax. Untersuchungen zur Chronologie. München, Univ., Diss. 1972.
- John H. Oakley: Athamas, Ino, Hermes, and the Infant Dionysos. A Hydria by Hermonax. Antike Kunst 25 (1982), p. 44-47.
- Cornelia Isler-Kerényi: Hermonax in Zürich, 1. Ein Puzzle mit Hermonaxscherben. Antike Kunst 26 (1983), p. 127-135.
- Cornelia Isler-Kerényi: Hermonax in Zürich, 2. Die Halsamphora Haniel. Antike Kunst 27 (1984), p. 54-57.
- Cornelia Isler-Kerényi: Hermonax in Zürich, 3. Der Schalenmaler. Antike Kunst 27 (1984), p. 154-165.
- Cornelia Isler-Kerényi: Hieron und Hermonax. In: Ancient Greek and related pottery. Proceedings of the international vase symposium, Amsterdam 12–15 April 1984 (Amsterdam 1984), p. 164.
- Cornelia Isler-Kerényi: Hermonax e i suoi temi dionisiaci. In: Images et sociétés en Grèce ancienne. L'iconographie comme méthode d'analyse. Actes du Colloque international, Lausanne 8-11 février 1984 (Lausanne 1987), p. 169-175.