Painter of Palermo 489
The Painter of Palermo 489 was an ancient Corinthian vase painter in the black-figure style; his real name is unknown. He was active during the transitional period between orientalising vase painting and black-figure proper (ca. 640–625 BC). He is known especially as the teacher of the Columbus Painter and thus a major indirect influence on several further Early Corinthian artists, such as the Chimaira Painter and the Chimaira Group. Darrell A. Amyx describes him as the Columbus Painter's great teacher[1] and a "powerful and accomplished painter".[2] He painted mostly aryballoi.
Bibliography
- Thomas Mannack: Griechische Vasenmalerei. Eine Einführung. Theiss, Stuttgart 2002, p. 101 ISBN 3-8062-1743-2.
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gollark: They'd initially checksum their genes against the cell they replicated from, and after that just make sure the MACs check out.
gollark: I know. I would make them store encryption keys to validate genes with.
gollark: When replicating, cells would assign themselves a random encryption key, store it in the ribosomes, and HMAC all their genes, of course.
gollark: If I was designing cells, they would have cryptographically signed DNA, for instance.
References
External links
- Aryballos in the J. Paul Getty Museum
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