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Judith Slaying Holofernes (Artemisia Gentileschi, Naples)

Judith Slaying Holofernes is a painting by the Italian early Baroque artist Artemisia Gentileschi, completed in 1612-13 and now at the Museo Capodimonte, Naples, Italy.[1] The picture is considered one of her iconic works. The canvas shows Judith beheading Holofernes. The subject takes an episode from the apocryphal Book of Judith in the Old Testament, which recounts the assassination of the Assyrian general Holofernes by the Israelite heroine Judith. The painting shows the moment when Judith, helped by her maidservant Abra, beheads the general after he has fallen asleep in a drunken stupor. She painted a second version now in the Uffizi, Florence, somewhere between 1613 and 1621.[2][3][4]

Judith Slaying Holofernes
ArtistArtemisia Gentileschi
Yearc. 1612-1613
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions158.8 cm × 125.5 cm ((6' 6" X 5' 4") 78.33 in × 64.13 in)
LocationMuseo Capodimonte, Naples

Early feminist critics interpreted the painting as a form of visual revenge following Gentileschi's rape by Agostino Tassi in 1611; similarly many other art historians see the painting in the context of her achievement in portraying strong women.[4]

Creation edit

Artemisia Gentileschi was around twenty years of age when she painted Judith Slaying Holofernes. Previously, Gentileschi had also completed Susanna and the Elders and Madonna and Child. These artworks already give an indication of Gentileschi's skill in representing body movement and facial expressions to express emotions. X-rays undertaken on the painting show that Gentileschi made several alterations to the painting (e.g. the position of Judith's arms, the position of the drapery) before it reached its current state.[5]

Sources and analysis edit

The episode of Judith beheading Holofernes is from a deuterocanonical book of the Bible. The episode is from the apocryphal Book of Judith in the Old Testament, which recounts the assassination of the Assyrian general Holofernes by the Israelite heroine Judith. Gentileschi draws upon the most climactic part of the Book of Judith where the beheading takes place.

Judith Slaying Holofernes has been considered to be related to the Power of Woman theme. Historian Susan L. Smith defines the "power of woman" as "the representational practice of bringing together at least two, but usually more, well-known figures from the Bible, ancient history or romance to exemplify a cluster of interrelated themes that include the wiles of woman, the power of love and the trials of marriage.[6] Gentileschi plays into the "wiles of woman" in her painting by literally portraying Judith at the main point of her domination over a man. Judith is shown as a beautiful woman, which helped her entice Holofernes, and also as a fierce heroine.

The painting is relentlessly physical, from the wide spurts of blood to the energy of the two women as they perform the act.[1] The effort of the women's struggle is most finely represented by the delicate face of the maid, who is younger than in other treatments of the same theme, which is grasped by the oversized, muscular fist of Holofernes as he desperately struggles to survive. Judith Slaying Holofernes utilises deeper primary colours in comparison to the Florentine version.[7] Judith is shown wearing a cobalt blue dress with gold accents and her maidservant wears a red gown. Both women have their sleeves rolled up. As a follower of Caravaggio, Artemisia Gentileschi makes use of chiaroscuro in the painting, with a dark background contrasting with the light shining directly on the scene of Judith beheading Holofernes.

History edit

Little is known of the painting's early history, however many scholars believe it was created while Artemisia was still living in Rome.[8] There is no information as of yet on the patron of this artwork. Its location was unknown until documented in the collection of Signora Saveria de Simone in Naples in 1827.[9] At some point in the painting's history, the left and top parts of the painting were cut off, leaving a curtailed version of the original painting.[4]

Renaissance edit

 
Donatello, Judith and Holofernes, c. 1457–1464. Bronze; 236cm Palazzo Vecchio, Florence

The Renaissance had a long-standing history of portraying Judith.[7] Many artists believed that the heroine Judith held many different qualities like chastity and humility.[7] Lucas Cranach the Elder painted a very straightforward version of Judith now known as Judith with the Head of Holofernes.[7] Cranach's Judith is shown with a resolved look on her face as she holds a sword in her hand. She wears an ornate green dress and the viewer can only see up to her mid-thigh region. Her body is cut off due to a marble ledge where the head of Holofernes sits. There is no gushing blood and Judith seems to have made a clean cut through Holofernes' neck. The phlegmatic look on Judith's face contrasts the intensity of her beheading.[7] Gentileschi captures the emotions of Judith's face but maintains more medical accuracy with the blood that is spilling down the bed. She shows Judith in the act of beheading rather than showing her holding the head of Holofernes as Cranach did.[7]

Donatello contributed his own interpretation with his sculpture Judith and Holofernes where Judith is depicted towering over Holofernes with a sword over her head. Holofernes' body slumps over and his head is still attached to his body. Donatello's Judith and Holofernes sought to symbolize the theme of pride in Holofernes and stands as a cautionary tale to the Medici family.[10] Writer Roger J. Crum notes that, "Judith's gesture, pulling back the general's head, renders sure her next blow, it also makes the neck all the more visible. 'Behold the neck of pride' commanded the inscription, and Donatello's treatment facilitated compliance".[10] Unlike Donatello's sculpture, Gentileschi shows Judith triumphing over Holofernes in the climactic moment of the beheading. Gentileschi also chose to show Judith without a head-covering and includes Judith's maidservant.

 
Johann Liss. Judith in the Tent of Holofernes, c. 1622. Oil on canvas; 128.5 x 99 cm. The National Gallery, London
 
Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Judith Beheading Holofernes, c.1599. Oil on canvas; 145x195 cm, Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Antica di Palazzo Barberini, Rome

Baroque edit

Judith beheading Holofernes was a very popular story amongst Baroque artists. Artemisia Gentileschi's contemporary Johann Liss stayed abreast with the Baroque style by including macabre imagery in his painting, Judith in the Tent of Holofernes. The painting shows the headless body of Holofernes slumping over. Judith sweeps Holofernes's head into a basket showing a look of swiftness about her. The viewer can see the maidservant's head in the background while the rest of her body is unseen. She seems eager to see what directions Judith will give her next.[7] The decapitated body of Holofernes has blood gushing out of it, showing Liss's interest in the human body.[7] Gentileschi has a similar urgency in her painting but shows Judith in mid-decapitation rather than showing Holofernes headless body. Gentileschi also uses the same amount of bloodiness in her painting.[7]

Caravaggio Influence edit

Caravaggio's Judith Beheading Holofernes shows a different portrayal of this scene. Mary Gerrard points out that Caravaggio "reintroduced a narrative emphasis, but focusing now upon the dramatic rather than the epic features of the story and upon the human conflict between the two principal characters".[5] Caravaggio shows Holofernes holding the blood coming from his neck like a string.[7] Rather than making the scene of Holofernes's beheading more palatable for the viewers, Gentileschi differs by not holding back the gruesome imagery. Gentileschi also shows Judith putting her full efforts into the slaying, even by employing her maidservant. In both Caravaggio and Gentileschi's paintings there is a notable absence of decorative detail in the background.[11]

Judith beheading Holofernes has been depicted by a number of artists including Giorgione, Titian, Rembrandt, Peter Paul Rubens and Caravaggio.

Caravaggio's Judith Beheading Holofernes is believed to be the main inspiration of Gentileschi's work,[11] and his influence shows in the naturalism and violence she brings to her canvas.[citation needed]

Related paintings by Artemisia Gentileschi edit

Gentileschi painted another painting, Judith and her Maidservant (1613–14), which shows Judith holding a dagger while her maidservant carries a basket containing a severed head. Judith and her Maidservant is displayed in the Palazzo Pitti, in Florence. A further three paintings by Gentileschi, in Naples, Detroit and Cannes, show her maid covering the head of Holofernes, while Judith herself looks out the frame of the picture. Gentileschi's father and fellow painter, Orazio Gentileschi was also very much influenced by Caravaggio's style and painted his own version of the tale, Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes.

Historiography edit

There have been many different interpretations and viewpoints on Judith Slaying Holofernes by art historians and biographers alike. Art historian Mary Garrard believes that Judith Slaying Holofernes portrays Judith as a "socially liberated woman who punishes masculine wrongdoing".[12] Although the painting depicts a scene from the Bible, art historians have suggested that Gentileschi drew herself as Judith and her mentor Agostino Tassi, who was tried for and convicted of her rape, as Holofernes. Gentileschi's biographer Mary Garrard famously proposed an autobiographical reading of the painting, stating that it functions as "a cathartic expression of the artist's private, and perhaps repressed, rage".[13] Griselda Pollock suggests that the painting should be "read less in terms of its overt references to Artemisia’s experience than as an encoding of the artist's sublimated responses to events in her life and the historical context in which she worked."[14] More recent discussion of the painting has moved away from too close a relationship to the rape of Gentileschi; rather it has focussed on Gentileschi's determination to paint strong women who are the centre of the action.[15]

Reception edit

The Florentine biographer Filippo Baldinucci described Judith Slaying Holofernes as "inspiring no little amount of terror."[7] At times the painting was popular, mainly due to the grotesque nature of the biblical scene, but also because of the artist's gender.[7] Yet when the painting was sold by Signora Saveria de Simone in 1827, it was sold as a work of Caravaggio.[9] This confusion shows Gentileschi's dedication as a caravagistta. In recent decades, there has been much art historical interest in this painting, with Eva Straussman-Pflanzer explaining that "the painting has... gained... distinction due to its feminist-inspired inclusion in the history of art".[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Gardner, Helen; Kleiner, Fred; Mamiya, Christin (2013). Gardner's Art Through the Ages: A Global History 14th edition. Wadsworth. p. 683. ISBN 978-1-111-77152-2.
  2. ^ "Judith and Holofernes". Google Art Project.
  3. ^ Camara, Esperança. "Gentileschi, Judith Slaying Holofernes". Khan Academy.
  4. ^ a b c Treves, Letizia. (2020). Artemisia. [S.l.]: National Gallery (London). p. 125. ISBN 978-1-85709-656-9. OCLC 1117638110.
  5. ^ a b Garrard, Mary (1989). Artemisia Gentileschi: the image of the female hero in Italian Baroque Art. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. p. 290. ISBN 0691040508.
  6. ^ Smith, Susan L. (11 November 2016). The Power of Women : A "Topos" in Medieval Art and Literature. ISBN 9781512809404. OCLC 979747791.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Straussman-Pflanzer, Eva (2013). Violence and Virtue: Artemisia Gentileschi's Judith Slaying Holofernes. Chicago, Illinois: The Art Institute of Chicago. pp. 1–38. ISBN 978-0-300-18679-6.
  8. ^ Whitlum-Cooper, Francesca (2020). Treves, Letizia (ed.). Artemisia. London: The National Gallery Company Ltd.
  9. ^ a b Bissell, R. Ward (1968). "Artemisia Gentileschi—A New Documented Chronology". The Art Bulletin. 50 (2): 153–168. doi:10.1080/00043079.1968.10789138. ISSN 0004-3079.
  10. ^ a b Crum, Roger J. (2001). "Severing the Neck of Pride: Donatello's "Judith and Holofernes" and the Recollection of Albizzi Shame in Medicean Florence". Artibus et Historiae. 22 (44): 23–29. doi:10.2307/1483711. ISSN 0391-9064. JSTOR 1483711.
  11. ^ a b "Judith Beheading Holofernes". Web Gallery of Art. Retrieved on June 6, 2009.
  12. ^ Garrard, Mary (2001). Artemisia Gentileschi around 1622: The Shaping and Reshaping of an Artistic Identity. Berkeley: California Studies in the History of Art. pp. 19–21. ISBN 0520224264.
  13. ^ Mary Garrard, Artemisia Gentileschi (1989), qtd. in Patricia Phillippy (2006). Painting women: cosmetics, canvases, and early modern culture. JHU Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-8018-8225-8.
  14. ^ Christiansen, Keith (2001). Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi. New York : Metropolitan Museum of Art: New Haven : Yale University Press. ISBN 1588390063.
  15. ^ Cohen, Elizabeth S. (2000). "The Trials of Artemisia Gentileschi: A Rape as History". Sixteenth Century Journal. 31 (1): 47–75. doi:10.2307/2671289. JSTOR 2671289.

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Judith Slaying Holofernes is a painting by the Italian early Baroque artist Artemisia Gentileschi completed in 1612 13 and now at the Museo Capodimonte Naples Italy 1 The picture is considered one of her iconic works The canvas shows Judith beheading Holofernes The subject takes an episode from the apocryphal Book of Judith in the Old Testament which recounts the assassination of the Assyrian general Holofernes by the Israelite heroine Judith The painting shows the moment when Judith helped by her maidservant Abra beheads the general after he has fallen asleep in a drunken stupor She painted a second version now in the Uffizi Florence somewhere between 1613 and 1621 2 3 4 Judith Slaying HolofernesArtistArtemisia GentileschiYearc 1612 1613MediumOil on canvasDimensions158 8 cm 125 5 cm 6 6 X 5 4 78 33 in 64 13 in LocationMuseo Capodimonte Naples Early feminist critics interpreted the painting as a form of visual revenge following Gentileschi s rape by Agostino Tassi in 1611 similarly many other art historians see the painting in the context of her achievement in portraying strong women 4 Contents 1 Creation 2 Sources and analysis 3 History 3 1 Renaissance 3 2 Baroque 3 2 1 Caravaggio Influence 3 2 2 Related paintings by Artemisia Gentileschi 4 Historiography 5 Reception 6 See also 7 ReferencesCreation editArtemisia Gentileschi was around twenty years of age when she painted Judith Slaying Holofernes Previously Gentileschi had also completed Susanna and the Elders and Madonna and Child These artworks already give an indication of Gentileschi s skill in representing body movement and facial expressions to express emotions X rays undertaken on the painting show that Gentileschi made several alterations to the painting e g the position of Judith s arms the position of the drapery before it reached its current state 5 Sources and analysis editThe episode of Judith beheading Holofernes is from a deuterocanonical book of the Bible The episode is from the apocryphal Book of Judith in the Old Testament which recounts the assassination of the Assyrian general Holofernes by the Israelite heroine Judith Gentileschi draws upon the most climactic part of the Book of Judith where the beheading takes place Judith Slaying Holofernes has been considered to be related to the Power of Woman theme Historian Susan L Smith defines the power of woman as the representational practice of bringing together at least two but usually more well known figures from the Bible ancient history or romance to exemplify a cluster of interrelated themes that include the wiles of woman the power of love and the trials of marriage 6 Gentileschi plays into the wiles of woman in her painting by literally portraying Judith at the main point of her domination over a man Judith is shown as a beautiful woman which helped her entice Holofernes and also as a fierce heroine The painting is relentlessly physical from the wide spurts of blood to the energy of the two women as they perform the act 1 The effort of the women s struggle is most finely represented by the delicate face of the maid who is younger than in other treatments of the same theme which is grasped by the oversized muscular fist of Holofernes as he desperately struggles to survive Judith Slaying Holofernes utilises deeper primary colours in comparison to the Florentine version 7 Judith is shown wearing a cobalt blue dress with gold accents and her maidservant wears a red gown Both women have their sleeves rolled up As a follower of Caravaggio Artemisia Gentileschi makes use of chiaroscuro in the painting with a dark background contrasting with the light shining directly on the scene of Judith beheading Holofernes History editLittle is known of the painting s early history however many scholars believe it was created while Artemisia was still living in Rome 8 There is no information as of yet on the patron of this artwork Its location was unknown until documented in the collection of Signora Saveria de Simone in Naples in 1827 9 At some point in the painting s history the left and top parts of the painting were cut off leaving a curtailed version of the original painting 4 Renaissance edit nbsp Donatello Judith and Holofernes c 1457 1464 Bronze 236cm Palazzo Vecchio Florence The Renaissance had a long standing history of portraying Judith 7 Many artists believed that the heroine Judith held many different qualities like chastity and humility 7 Lucas Cranach the Elder painted a very straightforward version of Judith now known as Judith with the Head of Holofernes 7 Cranach s Judith is shown with a resolved look on her face as she holds a sword in her hand She wears an ornate green dress and the viewer can only see up to her mid thigh region Her body is cut off due to a marble ledge where the head of Holofernes sits There is no gushing blood and Judith seems to have made a clean cut through Holofernes neck The phlegmatic look on Judith s face contrasts the intensity of her beheading 7 Gentileschi captures the emotions of Judith s face but maintains more medical accuracy with the blood that is spilling down the bed She shows Judith in the act of beheading rather than showing her holding the head of Holofernes as Cranach did 7 Donatello contributed his own interpretation with his sculpture Judith and Holofernes where Judith is depicted towering over Holofernes with a sword over her head Holofernes body slumps over and his head is still attached to his body Donatello s Judith and Holofernes sought to symbolize the theme of pride in Holofernes and stands as a cautionary tale to the Medici family 10 Writer Roger J Crum notes that Judith s gesture pulling back the general s head renders sure her next blow it also makes the neck all the more visible Behold the neck of pride commanded the inscription and Donatello s treatment facilitated compliance 10 Unlike Donatello s sculpture Gentileschi shows Judith triumphing over Holofernes in the climactic moment of the beheading Gentileschi also chose to show Judith without a head covering and includes Judith s maidservant nbsp Johann Liss Judith in the Tent of Holofernes c 1622 Oil on canvas 128 5 x 99 cm The National Gallery London nbsp Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio Judith Beheading Holofernes c 1599 Oil on canvas 145x195 cm Galleria Nazionale d Arte Antica di Palazzo Barberini Rome Baroque edit Judith beheading Holofernes was a very popular story amongst Baroque artists Artemisia Gentileschi s contemporary Johann Liss stayed abreast with the Baroque style by including macabre imagery in his painting Judith in the Tent of Holofernes The painting shows the headless body of Holofernes slumping over Judith sweeps Holofernes s head into a basket showing a look of swiftness about her The viewer can see the maidservant s head in the background while the rest of her body is unseen She seems eager to see what directions Judith will give her next 7 The decapitated body of Holofernes has blood gushing out of it showing Liss s interest in the human body 7 Gentileschi has a similar urgency in her painting but shows Judith in mid decapitation rather than showing Holofernes headless body Gentileschi also uses the same amount of bloodiness in her painting 7 Caravaggio Influence edit Caravaggio s Judith Beheading Holofernes shows a different portrayal of this scene Mary Gerrard points out that Caravaggio reintroduced a narrative emphasis but focusing now upon the dramatic rather than the epic features of the story and upon the human conflict between the two principal characters 5 Caravaggio shows Holofernes holding the blood coming from his neck like a string 7 Rather than making the scene of Holofernes s beheading more palatable for the viewers Gentileschi differs by not holding back the gruesome imagery Gentileschi also shows Judith putting her full efforts into the slaying even by employing her maidservant In both Caravaggio and Gentileschi s paintings there is a notable absence of decorative detail in the background 11 Judith beheading Holofernes has been depicted by a number of artists including Giorgione Titian Rembrandt Peter Paul Rubens and Caravaggio Caravaggio s Judith Beheading Holofernes is believed to be the main inspiration of Gentileschi s work 11 and his influence shows in the naturalism and violence she brings to her canvas citation needed Related paintings by Artemisia Gentileschi edit Gentileschi painted another painting Judith and her Maidservant 1613 14 which shows Judith holding a dagger while her maidservant carries a basket containing a severed head Judith and her Maidservant is displayed in the Palazzo Pitti in Florence A further three paintings by Gentileschi in Naples Detroit and Cannes show her maid covering the head of Holofernes while Judith herself looks out the frame of the picture Gentileschi s father and fellow painter Orazio Gentileschi was also very much influenced by Caravaggio s style and painted his own version of the tale Judith and Her Maidservant with the Head of Holofernes Historiography editThere have been many different interpretations and viewpoints on Judith Slaying Holofernes by art historians and biographers alike Art historian Mary Garrard believes that Judith Slaying Holofernes portrays Judith as a socially liberated woman who punishes masculine wrongdoing 12 Although the painting depicts a scene from the Bible art historians have suggested that Gentileschi drew herself as Judith and her mentor Agostino Tassi who was tried for and convicted of her rape as Holofernes Gentileschi s biographer Mary Garrard famously proposed an autobiographical reading of the painting stating that it functions as a cathartic expression of the artist s private and perhaps repressed rage 13 Griselda Pollock suggests that the painting should be read less in terms of its overt references to Artemisia s experience than as an encoding of the artist s sublimated responses to events in her life and the historical context in which she worked 14 More recent discussion of the painting has moved away from too close a relationship to the rape of Gentileschi rather it has focussed on Gentileschi s determination to paint strong women who are the centre of the action 15 Reception editThe Florentine biographer Filippo Baldinucci described Judith Slaying Holofernes as inspiring no little amount of terror 7 At times the painting was popular mainly due to the grotesque nature of the biblical scene but also because of the artist s gender 7 Yet when the painting was sold by Signora Saveria de Simone in 1827 it was sold as a work of Caravaggio 9 This confusion shows Gentileschi s dedication as a caravagistta In recent decades there has been much art historical interest in this painting with Eva Straussman Pflanzer explaining that the painting has gained distinction due to its feminist inspired inclusion in the history of art 7 See also editList of works by Artemisia GentileschiReferences edit a b Gardner Helen Kleiner Fred Mamiya Christin 2013 Gardner s Art Through the Ages A Global History 14th edition Wadsworth p 683 ISBN 978 1 111 77152 2 Judith and Holofernes Google Art Project Camara Esperanca Gentileschi Judith Slaying Holofernes Khan Academy a b c Treves Letizia 2020 Artemisia S l National Gallery London p 125 ISBN 978 1 85709 656 9 OCLC 1117638110 a b Garrard Mary 1989 Artemisia Gentileschi the image of the female hero in Italian Baroque Art Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press p 290 ISBN 0691040508 Smith Susan L 11 November 2016 The Power of Women A Topos in Medieval Art and Literature ISBN 9781512809404 OCLC 979747791 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Straussman Pflanzer Eva 2013 Violence and Virtue Artemisia Gentileschi s Judith Slaying Holofernes Chicago Illinois The Art Institute of Chicago pp 1 38 ISBN 978 0 300 18679 6 Whitlum Cooper Francesca 2020 Treves Letizia ed Artemisia London The National Gallery Company Ltd a b Bissell R Ward 1968 Artemisia Gentileschi A New Documented Chronology The Art Bulletin 50 2 153 168 doi 10 1080 00043079 1968 10789138 ISSN 0004 3079 a b Crum Roger J 2001 Severing the Neck of Pride Donatello s Judith and Holofernes and the Recollection of Albizzi Shame in Medicean Florence Artibus et Historiae 22 44 23 29 doi 10 2307 1483711 ISSN 0391 9064 JSTOR 1483711 a b Judith Beheading Holofernes Web Gallery of Art Retrieved on June 6 2009 Garrard Mary 2001 Artemisia Gentileschi around 1622 The Shaping and Reshaping of an Artistic Identity Berkeley California Studies in the History of Art pp 19 21 ISBN 0520224264 Mary Garrard Artemisia Gentileschi 1989 qtd in Patricia Phillippy 2006 Painting women cosmetics canvases and early modern culture JHU Press p 75 ISBN 978 0 8018 8225 8 Christiansen Keith 2001 Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi New York Metropolitan Museum of Art New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 1588390063 Cohen Elizabeth S 2000 The Trials of Artemisia Gentileschi A Rape as History Sixteenth Century Journal 31 1 47 75 doi 10 2307 2671289 JSTOR 2671289 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judith Slaying Holofernes Artemisia Gentileschi Naples amp oldid 1223100550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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