The shape of this container, most probably for perfumed oil, is unparalleled among Greek vases. It is moulded in the form of a hand clasping a miniature oil jar (lekythion), the smallest of the vase shapes produced by Greek workshops in the Classical period. The hand is painted white, a Greek convention to indicate that it is female. The lekythion, painted black, has a tall neck and a mouth with a broad overhanging rim and small opening for filling and pouring. In spite of its uniqueness, the hand vase belongs nonetheless to a category of Greek vessels known as plastic vases.
File of material relating to a vase. Includes photocopy of object description sheet which includes sketch of object (date unspecified); photocopy of photograph of object (date unspecified); transcription of label which described object in foundation building display (c. 1996). This object refers to object as an aryballos and that it might be a perfume or oil flask.
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