The name of the Pan Painter, a …

Years: 474BCE - 474BCE

The name of the Pan Painter, a Greek vase painter of the Attic red-figure style, is derived from his name vase, a bell krater in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, which depicts Pan pursuing a shepherd on the front, and on the back the death of Aktaion at the hands of Artemis.

A pupil of Myson, active around 480 to 450 BCE, he paints kraters, pelikes, hydriai and amphorae.

More than a hundred vases are attributed to him.

His figural scenes are characterized by freshness, skill, humor, and irony.

His figures can range from coarse to fine, revealing his connections with both Doric and Ionic art.

This places him within early Doric-Ionic Classical art.

His Pelike showing Heracles fighting Busiris, found at Thespiai (now in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens), is painted around 470.

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