Artemisia's Moment
After being eclipsed for centuries by her father, Orazio, Artemisia Gentileschi, the boldest female painter of her time, gets her due
- By Mary O'Neill
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2002, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
Though in Artemisia’s case the recognition is long overdue, the strong-willed self-promoter enjoyed considerable success in her own lifetime. Painter to dukes, princes, cardinals and kings, she was the first woman admitted to the prestigious Accademia del Disegno. “I have seen myself honored by all the kings and rulers of Europe to whom I have sent my works, not only with great gifts but also with most favored letters, which I keep with me,” she wrote to her friend the astronomer Galileo in 1635. But her artistic achievements have had to compete with a real-life event. At the age of 17, she was raped by a colleague of her father’s. The subsequent trial, and the 300-page transcript of it that survived, have shaped history’s assessment of the artist.
Orazio Gentileschi was one of the first painters to respond to a new aesthetic bursting forth in Rome in 1600, Artemisia’s 7th summer. The unveiling of a single commission—Caravaggio’s two works on the life of Saint Matthew—introduced key elements of a new canon, eventually called Baroque. Until that summer, Orazio had supported himself, his wife and four children by executing rather bland commissions for various altarpieces and chapels in Rome. But thunderstruck by Caravaggio’s vision, 37-yearold Orazio enthusiastically embraced the younger artist’s dramatic narratives, dynamic plays of light and shadow, energetic compositions, and close-ups of reality, such as a horse’s rump or a rotting corpse. Caravaggio scandalized the art world by painting directly, in an unidealized fashion, from live models, some of whom, rumor had it, were prostitutes; rivals even claimed he had used the body of a drowned woman as a model for his stiffened, barefoot Mother of Christ on her deathbed.
Orazio befriended Caravaggio and made the rounds with him of cheap taverns. But owing perhaps to the younger man’s hotheadedness and Orazio’s own “savage temperament,” as one contemporary described it, the friendship was short-lived. Caravaggio’s influence, however, was not. For Orazio’s magnificent Madonna and Child (1609), he drafted as his models a neighbor from the parish of Santa Maria del Popolo, where he was living at the time, and her child. His naturalistic depiction of the Madonna, without halo or jewelry, tenderly nursing, reflects Caravaggio’s influence and suggests a softer side to Orazio’s character.
Artemisia was 12 years old in 1605, the year her mother, Prudentia Montoni, died in childbirth. Orazio initially harbored no artistic ambitions for his only daughter—envisioning a life as a nun for her instead. But Artemisia’s ambition and talent soon asserted themselves. By the time she was 15, under her father’s tutelage, she had begun to assimilate Caravaggio’s methods. For her earliest known painting, Susanna and the Elders (1610), she likely used a live model, possibly herself reflected in a mirror. Rendering a scene from the biblical story of Susanna, in which two elders lust after a young matron, Artemisia depicted a voluptuous nude woman contorted into a defensive posture by the advances of two conspiring lechers. The work would prove all too prophetic.
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