Dinos Painter - Source of Translation

Source of Translation

This article incorporates information from this version of the equivalent article on the German Wikipedia.
Pottery of ancient Greece
Wine vessel shapes
  • Dinos
  • Kotyle
  • Krater
  • Kyathos
  • Psykter
  • Rhyton
  • Skyphos
Tableware
  • Eye-cup
  • Kantharos
  • Kylix
  • Oenochoe
  • Olpe
  • Patera
  • Pinakion
Perfume, oil, and wedding shapes
  • Alabastron
  • Aryballos
  • Askos
  • Lebes Gamikos
  • Lekythos
  • Loutrophoros
  • Lydion
  • Pyxis
  • Stirrup jar
Funerary shapes and cultic shapes
  • Kernos
  • Lekythos
  • Loutrophoros
  • Phiale
Storage shapes
  • Amphora
  • Hydria
  • Kalathos
  • Kalpis
  • Lebes
  • Pelike
  • Pithos
  • Stamnos
Utilitarian ceramics
  • Chuta
  • Epinetron
  • Luchnos
  • Situla
Techniques
  • Bilingual pottery
  • Black-figure
  • Bucchero
  • Red-figure
  • Six's technique
  • Three-phase firing
  • White-ground
Styles
  • Ancient Greek vase-painting styles
Potters and Painters
  • List of Greek potters
  • List of Greek vase painters
  • List of Little Masters
  • Name vase
Museums noted for pottery
  • Athens
  • Basel und Ludwig
  • Berlin
  • Bodrum
  • British
  • Edinburgh
  • Getty
  • Heraklion
  • Louvre
  • Thera
  • Ure
  • Vatican
  • Walters
Writers and books
  • Adolf Furtwängler
  • Corpus Vasorum Antiquorum
  • Dietrich von Bothmer
  • Edmond Pottier
  • John Beazley
  • John Boardman
Special topics in Greek pottery
  • Frying pans
  • Kalos inscription
  • Nikosthenic amphora
  • Panathenaic Amphorae
  • Symposium
  • Typology
Persondata
Name Dinos Painter
Alternative names
Short description
Date of birth
Place of birth
Date of death
Place of death

Read more about this topic:  Dinos Painter

Famous quotes containing the words source of, source and/or translation:

    By poeticizing love, we imagine in those we love virtues that they often do not possess; this then becomes the source of constant mistakes and constant distress.
    Anton Pavlovich Chekhov (1860–1904)

    The child knows only that he engages in play because it is enjoyable. He isn’t aware of his need to play—a need which has its source in the pressure of unsolved problems. Nor does he know that his pleasure in playing comes from a deep sense of well-being that is the direct result of feeling in control of things, in contrast to the rest of his life, which is managed by his parents or other adults.
    Bruno Bettelheim (20th century)

    Whilst Marx turned the Hegelian dialectic outwards, making it an instrument with which he could interpret the facts of history and so arrive at an objective science which insists on the translation of theory into action, Kierkegaard, on the other hand, turned the same instruments inwards, for the examination of his own soul or psychology, arriving at a subjective philosophy which involved him in the deepest pessimism and despair of action.
    Sir Herbert Read (1893–1968)