A potter is sitting in front of his wheel on which a kylix is standing. He is apparently engaged in attaching the handles. On a shelf above are piled some more kylikes and a jug. The whole is very roughly painted.
5. Corinthian black-figured pinax in the Museum of the Louvre.
Gazette archéologique, VI, 1880, p. 106, 3a.
Fig. 62. Potter incising lines (?)
Gazette archéologique, 1880, p. 106 (3a)
A potter is sitting before his wheel propelling it with one hand. He is working on what appears to be a one-handled jug. He is not “throwing” or “turning” it, since it already has its handle attached. Perhaps he is incising horizontal lines on it, for which process he could easily propel his own wheel. On the wall hang two other jugs (with similar incised lines), and some plates (?) are stacked on the floor.
6. Corinthian pinax in the Berlin Museum.
Antike Denkmäler, I, 1886, pl. 8, 14b.
Furtwängler, Beschreibung der Vasensammlung in Berlin, I, No. 885.