When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: vase stand

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Waterloo Vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waterloo_Vase

    The vase stands some distance from the palace in a rose garden created in the 1960s to the northwest of the main building. [5] It is placed on an austere brick paved plinth, the marble showing signs of severe erosion from atmospheric pollution. Restoration work was undertaken in the early 21st century. [6] The vase is a Grade I listed structure ...

  3. Vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vase

    Vases generally share a similar shape. The foot or the base may be bulbous, flat, carinate, [1] or another shape. The body forms the main portion of the piece. Some vases have a shoulder, where the body curves inward, a neck, which gives height, and a lip, where the vase flares back out at the top. Some vases are also given handles.

  4. Revellers Vase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revellers_Vase

    The vase was discovered in Vulci, in Italy (then part of the Papal States). [4] It was excavated by Lucien Bonaparte (the brother of Napoleon Bonaparte), who excavated more than 3,000 Attic vases from Etruscan tombs on his estate near Vulci from 1828. [8] Bonaparte found the vase in the sixth-century-BCE Tomb of the Cuccumella in March 1829. [9]

  5. Pedestal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedestal

    A pedestal (from French piédestal, from Italian piedistallo 'foot of a stall') or plinth is a support at the bottom of a statue, vase, column, or certain altars. Smaller pedestals, especially if round in shape, may be called socles. In civil engineering, it is also called basement.

  6. Kleitias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleitias

    Kleitias' most celebrated work today is the François Vase (c. 570 BCE), which bears over two hundred figures in its six friezes. Painted inscriptions on four pots and one ceramic stand name Kleitias as their painter and Ergotimos as their potter, [2] showing the craftsmen's close collaboration. [3]

  7. Dinos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinos

    Dinos means ' drinking cup ', but in modern typology is used (wrongly) for the same shape as a lebes, that is, a bowl with a spherical body meant to sit on a stand. It has no handles and no feet. [1] The Dinos Painter, one of the ancient Greek artists known for ancient Greek vase painting, takes his name from the type of vase characteristic of ...