Women Gladiators

Jusepe de Ribera · PD

Women Gladiators


Details

Year
1636
Medium
oil paint
Type
painting
Dimensions
235 × 212 cm

The story

The costumes say ancient Rome, but the fight Ribera painted had happened within living memory. He made this in Naples in 1636, one of a large set of scenes from Roman history ordered for a Spanish royal palace, and dressed his subject in classical robes to match the series. The event underneath is a Naples scandal from 1552, when two women, Isabella de Carazzi and Diambra de Pottinella, are said to have dueled over the same man in front of a marquis and a crowd. Ribera stages the last moment. One woman stands in cold profile, sword ready, while the other has already gone down. Whether it happened as told, Naples clearly enjoyed repeating it.

Women Gladiators — Jusepe de Ribera — MuseScope