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Black-Figure Pelike: Two Visitors to the Sphinx (Oedipus Confronting the Theban Sphinx?) (obverse), Hermes Playing the Flute to two Satyrs (reverse)
Black-Figure Pelike: Two Visitors to the Sphinx (Oedipus Confronting the Theban Sphinx?) (obverse), Hermes Playing the Flute to two Satyrs (reverse)
Black-Figure Pelike: Two Visitors to the Sphinx (Oedipus Confronting the Theban Sphinx?) (obverse), Hermes Playing the Flute to two Satyrs (reverse)

Black-Figure Pelike: Two Visitors to the Sphinx (Oedipus Confronting the Theban Sphinx?) (obverse), Hermes Playing the Flute to two Satyrs (reverse)

Maker (Greek (Attic), active c. 500 - 475 BCE)
Datecirca 490 B.C.E.
MediumEarthenware with slip-painted decoration
DimensionsHeight: 13-1/2 in. (34.3 cm)
Credit LineThe F.B. Tarbell Collection, Gift of E.P. Warren, 1902
Object number1967.115.340
Terms
  • Red-figure
  • Greek
Object TypeCeramics
On View
Not on view

The two images that appear on this pelike – a jar used to hold wine or oil – may be thematically related. The sphinx in the Oedipus legends was a proposer of riddles, and Hermes was renowned for his trickery. At the same time, the two images may be seen as illustrating the opposition between physical activity (dancing) and intellectual effort (answering the sphinx’s riddle). According to myth, the sphinx – a figure with a lion’s body and a human head – guarded the city of Thebes by asking all passersby the riddle of the three ages of man: What creature walks on four legs in the morning, two legs at noon, and three legs in the evening? The sphinx devoured any who could not answer her fatal question, but Oedipus was able to solve it. Hermes for the most part plays a subordinate role in myth, as a messenger of the gods or a leader of souls to the afterworld. The Homeric Hymn to Hermes recounts the legend that on the day of his birth he invented the lyre, which is why this and other vases show him playing that instrument.

Resource: The Classical Collection>, ed. Gloria Ferrari, Christina M. Nielsen, and Kelly Olson, Chicago: The David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art, 1998, p. 43–45.
Red-Figure Albastron: Two Running Warriors Carrying Peltas
Painter of Berlin 2268
circa 510 - 500 B.C.E.