Athenian vase fragment attributed to the Telos Painter (c. 400–300BC) from the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
The Telos Painter (Telos-Maler, Peintre de Telos, Telos Group, Telos-Gruppe, Groupe de Telos) is identified as a vase-painter active c. 390–360 BC in Attica, Greece. Consistent stylistic references in finds point to a unique artistic figure, with John Beazley specifying his name-vase after a red-figured bell-krater[1] in the British Museum.[2]
The vase is said to have been found – not produced – on the small Dodecanese island of Tilos, lying off the Turkish coast between Kos and Rhodes. No context is provided and the vase was subsequently acquired by Richard Payne Knight, who bequeathed it to the British Museum in 1824. Characteristic themes of this artist's work are representations of symposia and the figure of Dionysos: the central scene of the Tilos find is the seated god looking back towards Ariadne with various satyrs in attendance.
The quality of Knight's intriguing bequest, although its context is unknown, indicates the status of Tilos in Classical times and lends the small island a certain notoriety. Further examples of the work of the Telos Painter are in museum collections around the world,[3] inter alia: Athens,[4] Copenhagen,[5] London,[6] Los Angeles,[7] Madrid,[8] Milan,[9] Moscow,[10] Paris and[11] Vienna.[12]
Such vessels are sought after by private collectors and appear not infrequently at auction sales.[13]
John Beazley attributes over 40 finds to the Telos Painter in the 1963 edition of his seminal Attic Red Figure Vase Painters.[14]
The TelosPainter (Telos-Maler, Peintre de Telos, Telos Group, Telos-Gruppe, Groupe de Telos) is identified as a vase-painter active c. 390–360 BC in...
and later returned to found a temple to Apollo and Neptune. However, Telos (Telo or Tilo) does not appear in Greek mythology and the name probably has...
thought that Erinna lived elsewhere several centuries later: on the island of Telos, during the Hellenistic period towards the end of the 4th century BC. Only...
name Telo Martius – Telo, either for the local god of springs Telo or from the Latin tol, the base of the hill – and Martius, for the god of war. Telo Martius...
ordinary speech. Aristotle defines the end, purpose, or final "cause" (τέλος, télos) as that for the sake of which a thing is done. Like the form, this is a...
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appeared in a paperback edition. Thirteen years later, in December 2009, Telos Publishing released a revised hardcover edition, titled Hines Sight. In...
first relationship with a man after coming out as gay. Syrian-Swedish painter Jwan Yosef shared a photo of himself and Martin on Instagram on March 30...
Rubin also claimed that it would be equally unrealistic to force a Jewish painter "to take commissions of Hitler imagery from a Nazi sympathizer". In 2022...
sculptors such as Antonio Canova, Bertel Thorvaldsen, and Giovanni Migliara; painters such as Francesco Hayez; and furniture pieces of previous owners. The villa...
writers there have chosen, for sheer political reasons, to write in Tosk Telos. Telos Press. 1989. p. 1. Retrieved 16 July 2013. The political-cultural relevance...
National Interest National Review Public Discourse Tablet Taki's Magazine Telos The New American The New Atlantis The New Criterion Policy Review (Defunct)...
Teleology serves another vital function for Adlerians. Chilon's "hora telos" ("see the end, consider the consequences") provides for both healthy and...
including waiter, janitor, paper delivery man, floor stripper, house painter, remedial reading teacher and caretaker for an Episcopal church. In 1984...
also gave Thomas a portrait of the justice and his wife, according to the painter, Sharif Tarabay. Crow's foundation gave $105,000 to Yale Law School, Thomas's...
Denny Sanders, "Meet the Man Behind 'the Dan'" (Gary Katz interview), The Telos Alliance, July 12, 2016. "Laura Nyro's legacy of passion". Entertainment...