
Artemisia Gentileschi
1593–1653 · Papal States · Caravaggisti
The story
By 1610, at seventeen, Artemisia Gentileschi had already painted Susanna and the Elders, a large biblical scene signed with her own name, trained since childhood in her father Orazio's workshop in Rome. Two years later she spent seven months testifying in a rape trial. The accused was Agostino Tassi, a painter her father had hired to tutor her. Because the court did not trust a woman's word alone, she was made to give her testimony with cords tightened around her fingers, a routine method meant to test whether pain would make her change her story. It did not. Tassi was convicted, though the sentence against him was quietly never enforced.
Around that same period she painted her own version of Judith Beheading Holofernes, the Old Testament widow who saves her city by killing an invading general in his tent. Earlier painters of the scene, including her father's friend Caravaggio, had kept Judith at a careful distance from the violence. Gentileschi's Judith and her maid lean their full weight into the act, blood arcing across the sheets, and art historians have long pointed out the resemblance between the dying general's face and Tassi's.
She went on to build a career few women of her era could match, painting for the Medici court in Florence, then in Rome, Venice, Naples and briefly for Charles I in London, and in 1616 became the first woman admitted to Florence's Accademia delle Arti del Disegno, the city's painters' academy.
Works
34 works
Judith Slaying HolofernesArtemisia Gentileschi, 1613
Judith and Her MaidservantArtemisia Gentileschi, 1618
Susanna and the EldersArtemisia Gentileschi, 1610
Self-Portrait as the Allegory of PaintingArtemisia Gentileschi, 1638
Allegory of InclinationArtemisia Gentileschi, 1615
DanaëArtemisia Gentileschi, 1612
Judith Beheading HolofernesArtemisia Gentileschi, 1620
Esther before AhasuerusArtemisia Gentileschi, 1629
Conversion of the MagdaleneArtemisia Gentileschi, 1616
Jael and SiseraArtemisia Gentileschi, 1620
Self-Portrait as a Female MartyrArtemisia Gentileschi, 1615
Self-Portrait as a Lute PlayerArtemisia Gentileschi, 1616
CleopatraArtemisia Gentileschi, 1620
Madonna and ChildArtemisia Gentileschi, 1612
Self-Portrait as Saint Catherine of AlexandriaArtemisia Gentileschi, 1616
Adoration of the MagiArtemisia Gentileschi, 1636
Judith and Maidservant with Head of HolofernesArtemisia Gentileschi, 1623
LucretiaArtemisia Gentileschi, 1626
Saint Catherine of AlexandriaArtemisia Gentileschi, 1615
Saint CeciliaArtemisia Gentileschi, 1620
Susanna and the EldersArtemisia Gentileschi, 1649
AnnunciationArtemisia Gentileschi, 1630
Susanna and the EldersArtemisia Gentileschi, 1622
The Martyrdom of St Januarius in the Amphitheatre at PozzuoliArtemisia Gentileschi, 1636
Venus and Cupid (Sleeping Venus)Artemisia Gentileschi, 1627