<P> During the Protogeometric and Geometric periods, Greek pottery was decorated with abstract designs, in the former usually elegant and large, with plenty of unpainted space, but in the Geometric often densely covering most of the surface, as in the large pots by the Dipylon Master, who worked around 750 . He and other potters around his time began to introduce very stylised silhouette figures of humans and animals, especially horses . These often represent funeral processions, or battles, presumably representing those fought by the deceased . </P> <P> The Geometric phase was followed by an Orientalizing period in the late 8th century, when a few animals, many either mythical or not native to Greece (like the sphinx and lion respectively) were adapted from the Near East, accompanied by decorative motifs, such as the lotus and palmette . These were shown much larger than the previous figures . The Wild Goat Style is a regional variant, very often showing goats . Human figures were not so influenced from the East, but also became larger and more detailed . </P> <P> The fully mature black - figure technique, with added red and white details and incising for outlines and details, originated in Corinth during the early 7th century BC and was introduced into Attica about a generation later; it flourished until the end of the 6th century BC . The red - figure technique, invented in about 530 BC, reversed this tradition, with the pots being painted black and the figures painted in red . Red - figure vases slowly replaced the black - figure style . Sometimes larger vessels were engraved as well as painted . Erotic themes, both heterosexual and male homosexual, became common . By about 320 BC fine figurative vase - painting had ceased in Athens and other Greek centres, with the polychromatic Kerch style a final flourish; it was probably replaced by metalwork for most of its functions . West Slope Ware, with decorative motifs on a black glazed body, continued for over a century after . Italian red - figure painting ended by about 300, and in the next century the relatively primitive Hadra vases, probably from Crete, Centuripe ware from Sicily, and Panathenaic amphorae, now a frozen tradition, were the only large painted vases still made . </P> <Ul> <Li> <P> Middle Geometric krater, 99 cm high, Attic, c. 800 - 775 BC </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Late Geometric pyxis, British Museum </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Corinthian orientalising jug, c. 620 BC, Antikensammlungen Munich </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Black - figure olpe (wine vessel) by the Amasis Painter, depicting Herakles and Athena, c. 540 BC, Louvre </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Interior (tondo) of a red figure kylix, depicting Herakles and Athena, by Phoinix (potter) and Douris (painter), c. 480 - 470 BC, Antikensammlungen Munich </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Detail of a red - figure amphora depicting a satyr assaulting a maenad, by Pamphaios (potter) and Oltos (painter), c. 520 BC, Louvre </P> </Li> <Li> <P> White - ground lekythos with a scene of mourning by the Reed Painter, c. 420 - 410 BC, British Museum </P> </Li> <Li> <P> Hellenistic relief bowl with the head of a maenad, 2nd century BC (?), British Museum </P> </Li> </Ul>

What was the focus of greek art during the archaic period