Page:History of Art in Primitive Greece - Mycenian Art Vol 2.djvu/437

 382, -Primitive Greece : Mycenian Art. of the potter's customers. A comparative study, then, of the forms successively assumed by the products of the art, would lead to conclusions approximately the same as those arrived at Fi<i, 465.— lalysos cup. Ileiglit, 66 c. Fro, 466.— Cup from Allica. Height, (3 c. from the study of Mycenian architecture. The continuity which exists in the art-history of Greece from the earliest days down to historic times, will become more and more evident to higher Fig. 467.— Tnll glas criticism as discoveries are multiplied. The work of the ceramist, owing on the one hand to the properties inherent to the material upon which his art is exercised, and on the other to the nn-