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GENTILESCHI, Artemisia: Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting

🖼 Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting, 1630s
Oil on canvas
96.5 × 73.7 cm
Windsor, United Kingdom

Self-Portrait as the Allegory of Painting Artemisia Gentileschi masterfully claimed her identity as a professional artist by merging her likeness with the traditional female personification of Painting itself—a bold assertion of artistic authority in the male-dominated Baroque period. Created in the 1630s, this innovative work subverts the conventional allegory by having Gentileschi literally embody "La Pittura," complete with the symbol of the golden chain, thereby elevating her status from mere practitioner to the very embodiment of artistic creation. This self-portrait stands as a powerful declaration of her legitimacy and skill, challenging contemporary assumptions about women's capabilities in the visual arts during the Italian Baroque.

The story of art
The story of art
E. H. Gombrich
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