Artist

Attributed to the Syriskos Painter

Nationality
Greek (from Attica)
Birth/Death
active 480-460 B.C.E.

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Artwork by Attributed to the Syriskos Painter
Work of Art
Column Krater with Poseidon Chasing a Woman
Shiny black ceramic vessel with two handles shows a painted reddish-brown design of a bearded man chasing a woman with a three-pronged spear.
Work of Art
Column Krater with Satyr and Maenads

About

Syriskos worked as a vase painter and potter in Athens, Greece, in the 470s and 460s BCE. Syriskos’s art provides insight into the social status of potters in Athens. Changes in the way he signed his works are clues to his change in status within Athenian society. The name Syriskos means “little Syrian” and indicates that he was most likely an enslaved person. Many potters and painters during this time were enslaved. His early works were signed with the name Syriskos. His later works were signed Pistoxenos Syriskos, which means “trustworthy stranger, the little Syrian,” and then just Pistoxenos. The name change may indicate that he was freed from enslavement.