These days, anyone with even a passing interest in old master art knows about Artemisia Gentileschi (15931652), one of the very few women to become, against all odds, an acclaimed painter at a time when making art was an exclusively male province. Born in 1593 and motherless from the age of twelve, she grew up in the heart of Rome, in the studio of her painter father Orazio (1563 1639), apparently taught by him and displaying precocious talent. When she was seventeen, one of her fathers friends and collaborators, a painter specializing in landscape and illusionistic architecture, raped her, promised to marry her, but conveniently neglected to tell her until much later that his supposedly dead wife was, in fact, very much alive. A complicated, protracted, and now much-discussed trial followed, replete with false witnesses, counter-accusations, and even torture. The rapist was found guilty and sentenced to exile, although he didnt ...
Karen Wilkin is an editor at The Hudson Review and on the faculty at the New York Studio School
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 20 April 2002, on page 46
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