Rants and reactions to contemporary politics, art and culture.
Tuesday, January 17, 2017
Rome Journal: Artimesia Gentileschi et il suo tempo
"Judith Slaying Holofernes" by Artemisia Gentileschi
The bloody show is part of the birthing process and it might
be a good subtitle for "Artemisia Gentileschi et il suo tempo" at the Museo di Roma
which deals with the career one of the great woman artists of
all time. Artemisia might not have been " "untimely ripped" from her "mother’s womb" but there are heads everywhere in the iconography of the world in which she would
eventually make her mark. Her father Orazio was a noted painter in his own
right who did “David Contemplating the Head of Goliath” (1610-12). Nicholas Regnier would
take on the same subject (1625-6). Artemesia painted “Judith Slaying Holofernes” (1614-20) as
did Cristophano Allori (1620) and Bartolomeo Manfredi
(1618-20). Giovanni Baglione did “Herod, Herodias and Salome With the Head of John the
Baptist” (1615-20). It was a heady time, filled with both violence (Artemisia had been raped by the painter Agostina Tassi) and beauty. The influence of Caravaggio is unmistakeable; in fact Artemisia painted her Judith the year of his death. But
heads were not all that was cut. The exhibition includes Simon Vouet’s “The
Circumcision” (1620) and Mario Balassi’s “Ghismonda Receiving Guiscardo’s Heart" (1635). However, it’s important to remember that that this was also a period in
which the humanistic spirit soared to great new heights. Cosimo II di Medici
was one of Artemesia’s patrons and it was at his court that Artemisia met
Galileo. Paintings with titles like “Time Reveals Truth and Unmasks Deception" and “Intelligence, Memory and Will” (1624) are noteworthy. The painter Crisofano Allori was also the author of “The
Poetics of Affection.” Roland Barthes is quoted thusly by the curators, “The
strength of Artemisia Gentileschi’s paintings lies in the brusque reversal of
roles. It is informed by a new ideology, which we moderns received already: the
vindication of women.”
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