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Self Portrait
Artemisia Gentileschi was born in Rome, on July
8, 1593, the first child of the painter Orazio Gentileschi and one of the greatest
representatives of the school of Caravaggio. Artemisia was introduced to painting
in her father's workshop, showing much more talent than her brothers, who worked
alongside her. She learned drawing, how to mix color and how to paint. Since her
father's style took inspiration from Caravaggio during that period, her style
was just as heavily influenced in turn.
The first work of the young 17-years old Artemisia (even if many suspect that
she was helped by her father) was the Susanna e i Vecchioni ("Susanna and
the Elders") (1610), located in the Schönborn collection in Pommersfelden.
The picture shows how, under parental guidance, Artemisia assimilated the realism
of Caravaggio without being indifferent to the language of the Bologna school
(which had Annibale Carracci among its major artists).
In 1612, despite her early talent, Artemisia was denied access to the all-male
professional academies for art. At the time, her father was working with Agostino
Tassi to decorate the "volte" of Casino della Rose inside the Pallavicini
Rospigliosi Palace in Rome, so Orazio hired the Tuscan painter to tutor his daughter
privately. The unfortunate effect was that Artemisia was raped by Tassi. Even
though Tassi initially promised to marry Artemisia in order to restore her reputation,
he later reneged on his promise and Orazio reported Tassi to the authorities.
Self Portrait
In the ensuing seven-month trial, it was discovered that Tassi had planned to
murder his wife, had committed incest with his sister-in-law and planned to steal
some of Orazios paintings. During the trial Artemisia was given a gynecological
examination and was tortured using a device made of thongs wrapped around the
fingers and tightened by degrees a particularly cruel torture to a painter.
Both procedures were used to corroborate the truth of her allegation, the torture
device in the belief that if a person can tell the same story under torture as
without it, the story must be true. At the end of the trial Tassi was imprisoned
for just one year. The trial has subsequently influenced the feminist view of
Artemisia Gentileschi during the 20th century
The painting representing Giuditta che decapita Oloferne ("Judith decapitating
Holofernes") (1612-13), displayed in the Capodimonte Museum of Naples, is
impressive for the violence portrayed, and was interpreted as a wish for psychological
revenge for the violence Artemisia had suffered.
One month after the trial, in order to restore her honor, Orazio arranged for
his daughter to marry Pierantonio Stiattesi, a modest artist from Florence. Shortly
afterwards the couple moved to Florence, where Artemisia received a commission
for a painting at Casa Buonarroti and became a successful court painter, enjoying
the patronage of the Medici and Charles I. During this period, Artemisia also
painted the Madonna col Bambino ("The Virgin Mary with Baby"), currently
in the Spada Gallery, Rome.
Whilst in Florence, Artemisia and Pierantonio had four sons and one daughter.
But only the daughter, Prudenzia, survived to adulthood––following her mother's
return to Rome in 1621 and later move to Naples. After her mother's death in 1651,
Prudenzia slipped into obscurity and little is known of her subsequent life.
Contents: Judith W. Mann, Introduction; R. Ward Bissell, Re-thinking Early Artemisia;
Patrizia Cavazzini, The Other Women in Agostino Tassi's Life; Judith W. Mann
, The Myth of Artemisia as Chameleon: A new Look at the London Allegory of Painting;
Riccardo Lattuada and Eduardo Nappi, New Documents and Some Remarks on Artemisia's
Production in Naples and elsewhere; Mary D. Garrard, Artemisia's Hand;
Elizabeth Cohen, "What's in a Name?..."; Ann Sutherland Harris,
Artemisia and Orazio: Drawing Conclusions; Richard Spear, Money Matters;
Alexandra Lapierre, Artemisia: Art, Facts and Fictions.
The Passion of Artemisia by Susan Vreeland Paperback: 352 pages
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) (December 31, 2002)
Susan Vreeland's second novel, The Passion of Artemisia, traces a particular painting
through time: in this case, the post-Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi's
violent masterpiece, "Judith." Although the novel purports to cover the
life of the painter, the painting serves as a touchstone, foreshadowing Artemisia's
rape by Agostino Tassi, an assistant in her father's painting studio in Rome; the
well-documented (and humiliating) trial that followed; the early days of her hastily
arranged marriage; and her eventual triumph as the first woman elected to the Accademia
dell' Arte in Florence. Although Vreeland makes a bit free with her characters (which
she admits in her introduction), attributing some decidedly modern attitudes to
people who would not have thought that way at the time, her book is beautifully
researched and rich with casual detail of clothing, interiors, and street life.
She deftly works history and politics into the background of her canvas, keeping
her focus on Artemisia and her family. Beyond the paintings Artemisia left behind,
Vreeland's vision may be as close as we can come to understanding the anger and
ambition that kept this talented woman at the doors of the Accademia, demanding
entrance, in a time when respectable women rarely left their homes. Regina
Marler
Artemisia
Gentileschi by Mary D. Garrard Paperback: 640 pages Publisher: Princeton
University Press; Reprint edition (January 1, 1991)
Garrard's in-depth study of Renaissance/Baroque painter Gentileschi is both timely
and necessary. First, Garrard examines the life and work of the painter: the training
with her artist father, the debt to Michelangelo and Caravaggio, the biblical and
classical themes prevalent among her contemporaries, stylistic concerns, and her
popularity, much-publicized rape, and influence. Then, using this information as
context, Garrard proceeds to interpret the pictorial and spiritual contents of Gentileschi's
paintings, contending that, while no one gainsays Gentileschi's skill, her true
genius lies in her ability to empower mythic-heroic female subjects with "female
artistic intelligence." In her novel, based on Gentileschi's life, Banti attempts
to understand her own world, that of World War II Italy, through an imaginative
and spiritual friendship with the 17th-century painter. Weaving back and forth between
past and present, between a violated Artemesia and a violated Italy, Banti re-creates
characters and landscapes. Through mastery of style and material, she builds a portrayal
of courage and sorrow and creates a protagonist who moves from shadow to light.
In both works, the final illumination belongs to the reader. Lucy Breslin,
Portland, Me. Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Artemisia (European Women Writers Series) by Anna Banti, Susan Sontag
(Introduction), Shirley D'Ardia Caracciolo (Translator) Paperback: 232 pages
Publisher: Bison Books; Reprint edition (February 1, 2004)
The reissue, in translation, of Italian art historian Banti's imaginative recreation
of the life of artist Artemisia Gentileschi (1590-1642), initially published in
1947, is well deserved. This sensitive work of psychological portraiture, fluently
translated by Caracciolo, is an intricate, self-reflective work of art. Banti fuses
Artemisia's life with her own in Nazi-occupied Italy in a richly complex, historical
narrative present, entering into dialogues with her heroine on how best to present
her life, and on the nature and limitations of biography. As an unhappy adolescent
in Rome, starved for love from her aloof father Orazio, a prominent artist, Artemisia
allows herself to be seduced and is publicly humiliated for losing her "virtue."
Hastily married off for form's sake, she is removed by the contemptuous Orazio to
Florence where she begins to establish herself as a painter. Later, she assumes
married life in Rome, but her husband abandons her when she asserts herself professionally.
Eventually, Artemisia achieves independent success before she goes to her dying
father's side where her art earns her his longed-for respect and approbation. Artemisia's
struggle to fulfil herself, ensnared as she was in the toils of patriarchy with
its punitive double standards, is a powerful lesson in courage and the sustaining
powers of a vocation. Banti's richly poetical, wonderfully idiosyncratic prose amply
rewards the attentive reader. Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information,
Inc.
One of the first female artists to achieve recognition in her own time, Artemisia
Gentileschi (1593-1653) became instantly popular in the 1970s when feminist art
historians "discovered" her and argued vehemently for a place for her
in the canon of Italian baroque painters. Featured alongside her father, Orazio
Gentileschi, in a recent exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Artemisia
has continued to stir interest though her position in the canon remains precarious,
in part because her sensationalized life history has overshadowed her art.
In The Artemisia Files, Mieke Bal and her coauthors look squarely at this
early icon of feminist art history and the question of her status as an artist.
Considering the events that shaped her life and reputation––her relationship to
her father and her role as the victim in a highly publicized rape case during which
she was tortured into giving evidencethe authors make the case that Artemisia's
importance is due to more than her role as a poster child in the feminist attack
on traditional art history; here, Artemisia emerges more fully as a highly original
artist whose work is greater than the sum of the events that have traditionally
defined her.
The fresh, engaging discourse in The Artemisia Files will help to both renew the
reputation of this artist on the merit of her work and establish her rightful place
in the history of art.
A beautifully illustrated study of the life and works of this influential seventeenth-century
woman artist, including the first catalogue raisonné of her autograph works.
One of the most memorable creative personalities of the Baroque age and arguably
the most forcefully expressive and influential woman painter in history, the Roman-born
Artemisia Gentileschi (15931652/3) has become the central figure in the recovery
of the history of art produced by women. Applying a rigorous methodology, this profusely
illustrated study with interpretative text and catalogue raisonné embeds
Gentileschis pictorially and emotionally compelling pictures within the actual
sociocultural contexts in and for which they were created.
The interpretive text analyzes key pictures and primary literary evidence to reveal
the sweep of Artemisias oeuvre, chart her travels, define her standing with
artists and patrons of the period, investigate the links between her financial situations
and the artistic decisions that she made, and assess the validity of proposals regarding
her activity as a still-life painter, her access to professional organizations,
her level of literacy, and the nature of her subject matter. Exploring the question
of the interrelationships among Gentileschi s gender and experiences as a
woman, the state of her psyche, and her art, the text also confrontsand often
challengesthe widely embraced feminist interpretation of her pictures.
Many of the conclusions in the text are supported by an extensive register of archival
documents and by the very core of the study: the first and only catalogue raisonné
of Artemisias autograph works, each of the fifty-seven pictures exhaustively
investigated as to basic factual information, condition and color, iconography,
history, documentation and dating, existing copies, and bibliography. Catalogues
of misattribued and lost paintings complete this comprehensive volume.
Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi
by Keith Christiansen, Judith Mann Hardcover: 480 pages Publisher: Metropolitan
Museum of Art (December 1, 2001)
Father and daughter Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi were unusual and gifted artists.
Orazio Gentileschi (15631639) was the most talented follower of Caravaggio
and a figure of international renown, active at the courts of Marie de' Medici in
France, Charles I in England, and in Rome, Genoa, and Turin. Artemisia (1593
1652/3) was the first Italian woman artist who was not only praised for her art
by her contemporaries but whose paintings influenced the work of later generations.
She is today a key figure in gender studies. Essays by an international group of
art historians not only explore the development of each of these two painters individually
but also compare their work, showing how both were influenced by their times and
milieus. The book also includes new transcriptions of key parts of the notorious
rape trial of Artemisia.
Artemisia (1998)
Starring: Valentina Cervi, Michel Serrault Director: Agnès Merlet
Format:
Color, Dolby, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
Language: French
DVD Release Date: December 18, 2001
Run Time: 95 minutes
Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1653) was one of the first well-known female painters.
The movie tells the story of her youth, when she was guided and protected by her
father, the painter Orazio Gentileschi (Michel Serrault). Her professional curiosity
about the male anatomy, forbidden for her eyes, led her to the knowledge of sexual
pleasure. But she was also well known because in 1612 she had to appear in a courtroom
because her teacher, Agostino Tassi, was suspected of raping her. She tried to protect
him, but was put in the thumb screws...
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