Biography of Artemisia Gentileschi and Her Artwork

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Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1654?) was one of the most important women artists before the modern period and certainly one of the most famous female painters from the seventeenth century. Gentileschi’s paintings regularly featured women as the protagonists acting in a manner equal to men. In fact, forty nine of her paintings fall into this category. She was raped at the age of 18 and the subsequent events lent her a certain amount of notoriety. These factors have led many to interpret her artwork as an expression of her role as a female victim looking for revenge through her art. Instead, a closer examination of Gentileschi’s life and her artwork exposes the artist as an individual with personal strength and incredible talent who painted subjects similar to or the same as those of her male counterparts, instead of staying within the guiding principles of what was acceptable “feminine” art.
Gentileschi was born in Rome and trained under her father, Orazio Gentileschi, himself a well-known painter of the time. Her earliest signed work, Suzanna and the Elders, was completed by the time she was seventeen years old. A year later, she was raped by another painter, Agostino Tassi, who claimed in the subsequent trial that he was hired by her father to tutor her in perspective. She underwent torture to judge the truthfulness of her testimony against Tassi and eventually he was found guilty of the crime. Shortly thereafter, she married Pietro Stiattesi, a Florentine painter and moved to Florence. After six years in Florence, Gentileschi separated from Stiattesi and took their daughter with her back to Rome. The years following reveal that she traveled to a number of places; Genoa, Venice, and London included, but finished her ca...

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...as been viewed in the light of the knowledge of her personal history, as if the rape and trial were the defining events of her life story. Instead, she showed the fortitude to not only break past the restrictive bonds of what was acceptable “feminine” artwork, but to excel in producing paintings that were worthy of the masters, on the same playing field as any of male artist of her time. Artemisia Gentileschi was not an artist only intent on giving visual expression to her personal experiences and feelings, but a businesswoman trying to please her patrons and thus be successful in her field.

Works Cited

Garrard, Mary D. "Chapter 5-Judith." Artemisia Gentileschi. New York, NY: Rizzoli International Publications, 1993. 311. Print.
Getlein, Mark. "Chapter 17-The 17th and 18th Centuries." Living with Art. 9th ed. Boston, MA: McGraw Hill, 2008. 384-406. Print.

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