Abstract
M.A.
During the second half of the fifth-century B.C. there was a sudden proliferation of Attic vases
depicting adornment scenes. These scenes showed groups of women making themselves
desirable and for the first time women were eroticised within the context of marriage. Some
scholars have argued that this sudden abundance reflected a change in the Attic attitude towards
women, reflecting their increased social standing. These scholars proposed various hypotheses. It
is conjectured that Perikles' Citizenship Law of 451/450 increased the social standing of Athenian
daughters. The Peloponnesian War that raged from 431 to 404 BCE might also have forced women
to take on more public responsibilities; to fill the gaps left by the military men's absence. This
would explain why private activities of women became the subject matter of vase paintings at
that time. According to this viewpoint women became the new customers of the potters. There
are even scholars who maintain that these scenes contain hints of sexual liaisons between
women. A competing hypothesis is that these scenes were used to impose a patriarchal ideal of
femininity onto girls preparing themselves for marriage. Both these approaches imply that
women were the primary viewers of these scenes. The aim of this study is to evaluate these
hypotheses and to explore whether there may be other explanations.
In order to investigate these issues a visual semiotic analysis was performed of thirteen
painted vases representative of a variety of painters and vase shapes. This analysis was done in
two parts: a structural analysis and a pragmatic analysis. The structural analysis consisted of a
syntactic and semantic analysis, and helped to identify the pertinent signs and what they refer to.
Artistic principles and the theory of Gestalt played an important role in identifying key signs. The
pragmatic analysis delved deeper and was used to establish what message Athenian men and
women might have read into these painted vases. This brought to light the master narrative
prescribed by the patriarchy as well as women's acceptance thereof and how women used it to
condition their daughters.
A new hypothesis is proposed to explain the increase in this type of subject matter on painted
vases. It is concluded that the buyers of the vases were mostly men but that the consumers of
these artistic scenes were both male and female. It is also probable that after the Peloponnesian
War these vases depicted a return to basic patriarchal values that may have degenerated during
the war. It was also found that Perikles' Citizenship Law would have contributed more to the
social standing of the male guardian, than to that of a girl of marriageable age. The eroticisation
of women within the confines of marriage would thus have propagated the message of
procreation within the patriarchal family structure, rather than referring to erotic encounters
between women. These scenes, instead of showing the increased social standing of women,
reflect a reinforcement of patriarchal values.