“Grand Narratives” and “Personal Dramas”: (Re)reading the Masterpieces by Artemisia Gentileschi

Author:

Stępnik Małgorzata1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Political Science and Journalism, Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, 20-612 Lublin, Poland

Abstract

This article discusses the œuvre of Artemisia Gentileschi, a prominent Baroque painter who was rediscovered by art historian Roberto Longhi in the 1910s. Today, her art is interpreted through various lenses, including art theory, women’s studies, and psychoanalysis. Gentileschi’s paintings are often “read” in close reference to her painful biography, with a focus on the “chiaroscuro” of trauma and its overcoming. Significantly, such biography-oriented approaches seem to be predominant in scholarship on art created by women. The argument presented is that Gentileschi’s works require a thorough re-reading free of “compulsive biographism”, as postulated by Salomon. The focus should shift from an empathic Einfühlung (or empathic projection) towards an objective analysis based purely on art-historical or sociological criteria. This article also explores the presence of the socially mediated and mediatised figure of the artist in fine literature (novels by Banti, Lapierre and Vreeland), cinematic biographies (Artemisia, directed by Merlet, documentaries (Artemisia Gentileschi: Warrior Painter, directed by River), anime (a series titled Arte, directed by Takayuki Hamana), and graphic novels (Ferlut and Baudouin; Siciliano). In this artistic constellation Artemisia is labelled as an art/feminist “icon”, a female genius, and as in numerous scholarly texts dedicated to her, “a victim”. I propose that the discussed literary and visual texts related to Gentileschi be interpreted as symptomatic (in line with Panofsky’s concept of ‘iconology’) of the contemporary mentality, which is filtered through feminist and subaltern thought.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference50 articles.

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2. Doliveux, Maëlle, and Dubrov, Andrew (2021). A Graphic Novel Written by Nathalie Ferlut, Beehive Books. Illustrated by Tamia Baudouin.

3. Bal, Mieke (1999). Quoting Caravaggio: Contemporary Art, Preposterous History, University of Chicago Press.

4. Bal, Mieke (2006). The Artemisia Files: Artemisia Gentileschi for Feminists and Other Thinking People, The University of Chicago Press.

5. Baldassari, Francesca (2016). Artemisia Gentileschi e il suo Tempo, Skira.

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