Tleson
Tleson was an Attic potter and perhaps also a vase painter in the black-figure style.
He was the son of the famous potter Nearchos and brother of Ergoteles.
His workshop apparently produced mostly Little-master cups. Most of his vases were painted by the Tleson Painter, whose real name is unknown, and whose conventional name is derived from Tleson. Based on the fact that vases known by that hand so far are only ever signed by Tleson, John Beazley suggested that Tleson and the Tleson painter may be identical. There is no proof for this hypothesis. Some of Tleson's pots were painted by other artists, such as Oltos and the Centaur Painter.
Selected works
Where no painter is named, the vases were painted by the Tleson painter- Athens, Agora Museum
- Athens, National Museum
- Basel, Antikenmuseum und Sammlung Ludwig
- Berlin, Antikensammlung
- Bonn, Akademisches Kunstmuseum
- Boston, Museum of Fine Arts
- Braunschweig, Herzog Anton Ulrich-Museum
- Brussels, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium
- Bryn Mawr, Bryn Mawr College
- Compiègne, Musée Vivenel
- Dresden, Skulpturensammlung
- Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität
- Göttingen, Georg-August-Universität
- Heidelberg, Heidelberg University
- Izmir, İzmir Archaeological Museum
- Karlsruhe, Baden State Museum
- Leipzig, Museum of Antiquities of Leipzig University
- London, British Museum
- Malibu, J. Paul Getty Museum
- Manchester, Manchester Art Gallery
- Moscow, State Historical Museum
- Munich, Antikensammlung
- Naples, Museo Archeologico Nazionale
- New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art
- Nicosia, Cyprus Museum
- Oxford, Ashmolean Museum
- Paris, BnF Museum
- Paris, Musée National du Louvre
- Rome, Museo Nazionale di Villa Giulia
- St. Petersburg, Hermitage Museum
- Syracuse, Museo archeologico regionale Paolo Orsi
- Taranto, National Archaeological Museum of Taranto
- Toledo, Toledo Museum of Art
- Vatican, Museo Gregoriano Etrusco
- Warsaw, Muzeum Narodowe
- Washington, National Museum of Natural History
- Würzburg, Martin von Wagner Museum