User:ArchaiOptix/Red figure vase painters of Sicily

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Dear visitor,
welcome to this partition of my picture gallery.
For my picture galleries about other object categories of ancient art please turn to my general user page (link on the top of this page).

Old Satyr Marsyas with ivy wreath

About me:
I am teaching Classics (Ancient Greek and Latin), Theology, modern Greek and Italian. I am particularly interested in Archaeology and History of Ancient Art. One of my other hobbies is photography. Combining these two hobbies I take lots of pictures in museums and archaeological sites and catalogue the photos according to the scientific literature.

About this picture gallery:
Under the relevant categories (of museums and painting styles) and more systematically on this user page I share a selection of my photos of ancient art.
The site is under construction since January 2020.
I thank all directors of museums who permit photography of the exhibits for private, educational, scientific, non-commercial purposes, thus spreading the knowledge of their treasures in a wider public. I hope that my photos published on wikimedia commons act also as an incentive to visit these museums and admire the works of art directly. Therefore editing the photos I refrain from replacing the background, so that the objects can be seen as displayed in the museum. If you intend to use one of my photos for commercial aims, I would recommend you to contact the museum.

The structure of this picture gallery:
→ workshop / group
→→ painter / subgroup
classified according to Arthur Dale Trendall, The red-figured vases of Lucania, Campania and Sicily, Oxford 1967, with first supplement 1970, second supplement 1973 and third supplement 1983,
abbreviated in the image titles as: LCS II (book II = Campanian, origins) and LCS III (book III = Sicilian) followed by the vase number in LCS / suppl.
The common origins of Sicilian and Campanian red-figure painting (in LCS treated in book II, part I) are inserted here, since some of these painters started in Sicily and emigrated later to Campania.
additional attributions by other authors ("extra")

the origins of Sicilian (and Campanian) red-figure vase painting[edit]

Chequer Group[edit]

Chequer Painter[edit]

Dirce Group[edit]

Dirce Painter[edit]

Painter of Naples 2074[edit]

Prado/Fienga Group[edit]

Prado Painter, identical with the Fienga Painter[edit]

Sikon Painter and Tunny-Seller Painter[edit]

Sikon Painter[edit]

Tunny-Seller Painter[edit]

early fish-plates from Sicily and southern Calabria[edit]

Sicilian red-figure part 1: Lentini-Manfria Group and Borelli Group[edit]

Lentini-Manfria Group[edit]

forerunners[edit]

Lentini Painter[edit]

Manfria Painter[edit]

Painter of B.M. F 473[edit]

Gibil Gabib Group[edit]

Maron Painter[edit]

Borelli Group[edit]

Borelli Painter[edit]

Lentini Hydriai Group[edit]

Sicilian red-figure part 2: Etna Group[edit]

Zürich Group and Cefalù Group[edit]

Zürich Group[edit]

ZA Painter[edit]

head vases (vases decorated with female heads)[edit]

Paternò Group[edit]

Sicilian red-figure part 3: Lipari Group[edit]

Lipari Group[edit]

Lipari Painter[edit]