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Hearst Museum object titled Aryballos, accession number 8-1795, described as Etrusco-Corinthian aryballos. Description from Matteucig (1951): Aryballos; height; 10 cm; diameter; 5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XVI, 16). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pink cream; cream slip; light brown and violet paint. Pointed aryballos. On lip, three bands, outer ones brown, middle one, violet; edge of lip, brown; on flat handle, three brown bands; brown band at base of neck; on shoulder, tongue pattern; below this, a series of five alternating brown and violet bands, divided by reserved spaces; a reserved space; two narrow brown bands; another reserved space; point and foot solid brown; three incised lines above foot.  Cf. Peabody Museum, Cambridge, Mass., no. 40-4269.
Hearst Museum object titled Plastic lekythos and stopper, accession number 8-1398, described as Etruscan plastic lekythos and stopper; surface worn; some paint missing and thin coat of transparent glaze wash now mostly gone; patches of brown and flecks of black incrustation; lekythos in form of kneeling doe, whose long, slender neck is the neck of the lekythos and whose head serves as the stopper; remains of dark red paint on head, light brown to red-brown dots on body.
Hearst Museum object titled Plate, accession number 8-1743, described as Etrusco-Corinthian plate. Attributed to the Rosoni Painter (ca. 580 BCE). Description from Matteucig (1951): Plate; height: 5.2 cm; diameter: 24.5 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIII, 18). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pale buff; cream slip; decoration in dark-brown and violet paint. Low plate with ring base; vertical lip, grooved below; at diametrically opposite sides, a small handle, made of a strip of clay which fits into the groove. In the center, four concentric circles; then an animal zone of panthers and ducks, divided by rosettes and other typical Corinthian fillings; lip brown. Under foot, a circle and two sets of diametrically opposite groups of four petals.  Cf. Not. Sc., 1898, p. 442, fig. 7, from Poggio Buco. Perhaps Rosone style; see Beazley-Magi, p. 74, nos. 84,85.
Hearst Museum object titled Skyphos, accession number 8-1850, described as Etrusco-Corinthian skyphos; conic rim. Description from Matteucig (1951): Cup; height: 8.5 cm; diameter: 16.3 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIX, 5). Italo-Corinthian. Clay pinkish cream; cream slip; dark brown and violet paint. Cup with offset rim, similar to 8-1789 and 8-1790. On rim, a line of brown dots between two narrow bands; a zone of alternating brown and reserved rectangles; an other line of dots between two narrow bands. On shoulder, a panel with two ducks going right; upper part of ducks' plumage, violet; wings with alternating brown and violet feathers; brown feathers have traces of a cream stripe; between ducks, a nine-petal rosette, with brown and violet petals; other typical filling ornaments. Below animal panel, a violet band; the rest, solid brown. Handles, solid brown; one broken off. Cf. Montelius, pi. 245, no. 5, from Orvieto; St. Etr., IX, 1935, PL V, i, from Heba; Albizzati, Pl. XIII, 139; Robinson, Toronto Vases, Pl. XIII, 185. Cf. Also our nos. 1789 and 1790, Pl. XVI, 13, 14.