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Hearst Museum object titled Broken kylix, accession number 8-3222, described as Attic Red-figure kylix; broken and needs mending; Interior: youth in mantle; maeander border; A-B: Komos; on A, flute-player (nude, carrying chiton) between two komasts (one at 1. with stick); flute-case in field; on B, flute-player (wearing himation) between two komasts with knotted sticks.
Hearst Museum object titled Cup, accession number 8-3216, described as Attic Red-figure kylix; put together from fragments; foot modern; Interior: youth, with chlamys and akontion, standing to left; border of maeander and saltire squares; A, two youths, one with chlamys, strigil and staff or akontion, the other with akontion; B, similar, but both figures given strigils; palmette complexes at handles. Notice: Image restricted due to its potentially sensitive nature. Contact Museum to request access.
Hearst Museum object titled Cup, accession number 8-3223, described as Attic Red-figure kylix; much restored: foot and large parts of bowl modern; heavily repainted; face of youth and about 1/3rd of maeander redrawn; inside only decorated: within tondo, framed by maeander and cross-squares, a youth, wrapped in a mantle and holding a staff, seated to right with head turned back.
Hearst Museum object titled Cup, accession number 8-9102, described as Kylix, small two handled cup; intact with surface badly encrusted; rim black to brown glaze. Diameter 11 cm Materials and Techniques: Ceramic, wheel-turned, terracotta
Hearst Museum object titled Cup, accession number 8-1742, described as Small broken cup. Description from Matteucig (1951): Stemless Kylix; height: 4.8 cm; diameter: 12.3 cm (see Matteucig's plate XIII, 13). Italo-Protocorinthian. Clay pale gray, well purified; lustrous greenish-cream slip; lustrous dark brown and violet paint. Around lip, a reserved zone in the color of the slip; below this, a broad dark brown band; another reserved zone filled, under each handle, by awave motive, and by a running dog, upside down, halfway between handles; below this, three more narrow dark brown bands; then a reserved zone and another band just above and around foot. Inside, traces of alternating dark brown and violet concentric circles. Vase very fragmentary; about one half missIng.
Hearst Museum object titled Cup, accession number 8-1509, described as Another, similar to 8-1508. Description from Matteucig (1951): Kylix; height: 5.5 cm; diameter: 13.5 cm. (see Matteucig's plate II, 5). Clay, surface, and shape as in 8-1508. Restored from several fragments. Slight lime incrustation.
Hearst Museum object titled Cup, accession number 8-1508, described as Small eared cup. Description from Matteucig (1951): Kylix; height: 6.5 cm; diameter: 14.5 cm. (see Matteucig's plate II, 4). Clay pale buff, well purified; highly polished surface. Low cup with slightly offset rim, two "pinched" vertical handles, perhaps intended to be theriomorphic, (birds' heads?). Low, hollow foot, with a projecting cone in the center. Very well preserved, except for a few chipped-off particles, some lime deposits, and a few splotches of red paint scattered on the surface.  The pedigree of this shape is not clear. Boehlau calls a kylix in Berlin which is just like ours a "Greek import," (J.d.L, XV, 1900, p. 169, no. 19), which I doubt. The vase seems closely related to Etruscan metalwork; cf. MUÍ. Greg., Pt. I, PI. XIX, for a silver parallel from Caere, and Montelius, pi. 311, 4, from Falerii, pi. 215, 8, and pi. 339, 4 from the Regolini-Galassi tomb. Cf. J.d.L, XV, 1900, p. 159, fig. 4, i, for a parallel from Poggio Buco. Mancinelli, in his inventory, p. 3, no. 8, says that this is a constant type in tombe a fossa semplice, a type which some times, as in tomb XV, from Sparne, is decorated with red geometric designs. For the latest treatment of these vases, cf. Dohan, PI. XLIX, 16-18, and p. 96.
Hearst Museum object titled Handle, accession number 8-1204, described as Handle, kylix form; bronze; 2 ends flattened
Hearst Museum object titled Incomplete kylix, accession number 8-930, described as Attic Red-figure kylix; fragmentary: has lost foot and stem, a handle and part of the bowl; handle patch reaches rim; Interior: maeander border with cross-squares; head and shoulder of youth; A, three youths; in background, lyre, cross, folded tablet, aryballos; leaf; B, three youths; cross, bag, leaf; floral pattern under handles.
Hearst Museum object titled Incomplete kylix, accession number 8-2306, described as Overpainted kylix (drinking cup); interior: naked athlete and draped youth facing each other; exterior: white circles concentric to kylix including stem, still missing: quite worn.