BG Boeotian kantharos
Black glazed Boeotian kantharos, mid 5th cent. BCE A drinking vessel featuring distinctive arched band handles and a slightly elevated lip above th...
View full detailsThe Black Glazed Ware is a type of ancient Athenian fine pottery produced in the Classical and Hellenistic periods. The modern term describes vessels covered with a shiny black glaze which is produced with the sintering of an extremely fine-grained clay paint, a natural colloidal clay slip in water, and an ancient nanomaterial.
The cups and plates produced at our THETIS workshop are based on ancient prototypes from the collection of the Athens Agora and represent the everyday objects used by Athenian citizens (5th-3rd cent BC).
As you go through this Black glazed ware collection and visualize how these items will elevate a space, we urge you to think beyond home décor. For us, these items are beautiful and practical at the same time, made for you to use in your daily life. They can be safely used as drinking cups and tableware.
Black glazed Boeotian kantharos, mid 5th cent. BCE A drinking vessel featuring distinctive arched band handles and a slightly elevated lip above th...
View full detailsBlack glazed perfume oil-flask based on Attic aryballoi of the early 5th cent BCE (ca 500 BCE). An aryballos (Greek: ἀρύβαλλος; plural aryballoi) w...
View full detailsBlack glazed Hellenistic kantharos -'West Slope' style, 3rd cent BC, plain The modern term West Slope pottery describes a type of Greek fine potter...
View full detailsBlack Glazed skyphos - Attic type AA, 470-460 BCE H:12cm, maxL:21c , rim D:14cm
Black glazed one-handle skyphos AA, 500 - 480 BCE. H: 10cm, maxL: 17cm, rimD: 13cm
Black glazed Hellenistic kantharos -'West Slope' style, 3rd cent BC, ribbed decoration The modern term West Slope pottery describes a type of Greek...
View full detailsBlack glazed Calyx Krater, 4th cent. BCE A krater or crater (Greek: κρατήρ, kratēr, literally "mixing vessel") was a large vase in Ancient Greece, ...
View full detailsBlack glaze neck-amphora of the Nikosthenic type, ca. 525-520 BCE. Based on an Attic prototype found in Cerveteri, Etruria from the Louvre Museum C...
View full detailsBlack glazed ribbed mesomphalos phiale AA, 500-480 BCE H: 6,5cm, maxL: 16,5 cm
Bowl on stand with small cups attached around rim. Based on a black glazed multiple kernos AA, late 4th cent. BCE. H: 15,5cm, maxL: 31cm, rimD: 30cm