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Susanna and the Elders (Artemisia Gentileschi, Pommersfelden)

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Susanna and the Elders
ArtistArtemisia Gentileschi
Yearcirca 1610
Mediumoil on canvas
Dimensions170 cm × 119 cm (67 in × 47 in)
LocationSchloss Weißenstein, Pommersfelden

Susanna and the Elders is a 1610 painting by the Italian Baroque artist Artemisia Gentileschi and is her earliest-known signed and dated work.[1] It was one of Gentileschi's signature works. She painted several variations of the scene in her career.[2] It hangs at Schloss Weißenstein in Pommersfelden, Germany.[3] The work shows a frightened Susanna with two men lurking above her while she is in the bath. The subject matter comes from the deuterocanonical Book of Susanna in the Additions to Daniel. This was a popular scene to paint during the Baroque period.[3]


Description

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Subject matter

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The painting is a representation of a biblical narrative featured in chapter 13 of the Book of Daniel according to the text as maintained by the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, although not generally by Protestants.

Two elderly men are shown spying on a young married woman named Susanna.[3] Susanna had gone out to the garden one day to bathe. The elders were hiding in the garden.[3] They demanded sexual favors from her,[3] which she refused. The men threatened to ruin her reputation, but Susanna held fast.[3] The two elders then falsely accused Susanna of adultery – a crime that was punishable by death.[1] When Daniel, a wise young Hebrew man, questioned them separately, details in the two elders' stories did not match.[3] Their conflicting stories revealed the falsehood of their testimony, thus clearing Susanna's name.[3]

The subject was relatively common in European art from the 16th century, with Susanna exemplifying the virtues of modesty and fidelity. In practice however, it allowed artists the opportunity to display their skill in the depiction of the female nude, often for the pleasure of their male patrons.[1]

Interpretations of Gentileschi's work

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Annibale Carracci, Susanna and the Elders

Gentileschi's painting has been compared to that of other artists who used the same subject, but were male.[3] Gentileschi's Susanna sits uncomfortably,[3] a twist to her body showing her distress, unlike many depictions that fail to reveal any discomfort. A common comparison is made with Annibale Carracci’s version of Susanna and the Elders.[4][3][5] Gentileschi's Susanna is both uncomfortable and more feminine than Carracci's Susanna,[3] whose body appears more anatomically masculine yet is portrayed in a more eroticized position, as if receptive to the two elders' attention.[3] Rather than depicting the typical body type of previous paintings of Susanna, Gentileschi chose a more Classical style for Susanna's body, which elevates her nudity in a more heroic sense. The setting of this scene in a stone enclosure further represents a departure from the typical garden setting used in previous depictions by other artists.[1] Gentileschi's vertical composition also spreads the two elders at the top as a dark element hovering over the scene, creating a feeling of malevolent pressure imposed upon Susanna.[3]

Gentileschi painted this scene at least twice more during her lifetime.[6] As this version is the earliest, it has been presumed by Roberto Contini, Germaine Greer, Susanna Stolzenwald, and Mary D. Garrard that she painted with her father's guidance.[7][5] Art historians Roberto Longhi and Andrea Emiliani questioned how Gentileschi could paint a convincing female nude at such a young age.[3] They speculated whether she had studied female anatomy or used a model of her father's, as his work studio was in the family home.[3] However, no other artist had explored the psychological dimension of this Biblical story before, suggesting that Gentileschi's father, a traditionally trained artist, would have had no hand in influencing the concept of the young artist's painting.[3] Artemisia's naturalistic rendering of the female form stands in contrast to her father's style, however the adjustments revealed by x-rays may suggest that Orazio's guidance was focused on compositional arrangement rather than depiction.[1]

Signature

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Gentileschi's signature is shown on the stone step on the lower left of the image.[1] She only signed 19 of her paintings in total.[8] The spelling and format of signature varied because at that time, spelling was not standardized.[8] Rather, the body of works are attributed to Gentileschi,[8] partly because historians have been able to match her paintings‘ signatures on letters she wrote.[8] However, Raymond Ward Bissell questioned if she was the one signing her paintings because of the spellings used in four of the letters in which "Gentileschi" is spelled with the letter "e" used in place of "i".[8]

Gentileschi painting style

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Gentileschi did not include landscape or background in many of her paintings.[4] As shown in this painting, the only background is a blue sky.[4] It was not until the mid-1630s that Gentileschi began using background or landscape,[4] which may be seen in another of her paintings of the same story.[9]

History

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Date

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The questioning of the date of the painting started in 1845, in Joseph Heller's guidebook for the Pommersfelden collection. Art historian Rave said that the last digit looked like a 6 or a 9, so the date could be 1616 or 1619. On the other hand, art historians such as Rose-Marie Hagen said that it was a zero, and the date of 1610 was correct.[3] The painting was x-rayed in 1970 by Susanna P. Sack, which confirmed that the date is written as 1610.[3] That revelation was published by Mary D. Garrard in 1982 and most scholars have accepted it.[3] The date of the painting is important because a date of 1616 or 1619 it would put the painting into the Florentine period. However, since the work was completed in 1610, it was completed during the Roman period.[3] Even Gentileschi's birth year was questioned by art historians Roberto Longhi and Andrea Emiliani, because there was an incorrect identification of her birth date.[3] That was corrected by Bissell in 1968, after she found a public record of Gentileschi's birth year.[3]

Father's guidance

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Gentileschi's father, Orazio Gentileschi, was one of the first people in Italy to paint in the style of Caravaggio.[7][6] With Gentileschi's father being her first teacher, it was not surprising that Gentileschi painted in a similar style.[6][7] Art historians have different opinions about this version of Susanna and the Elders.[5] Although there is no evidence to support them, opinions of art historians about the subject of these paintings abound.[3] One opinion comes from Marry D. Garrard who thinks that Gentileschi is representing a rare visual of a woman who has been victimized.[5] This is because Garrard believes that the painting could be related to Gentileschi's resistance to the sexual harassment that she received from men in her community before she was raped by Agostino Tassi.[5] On the other hand, Gianni Papi stated his opinion that the two elders were meant to represent her father and her second teacher, Tassi, because it is thought that his harassment of her was going on in the years prior to the rape and trial.[3] If she was being harassed by Tassi in the years leading up to the trial, Gentileschi could have been portraying her feelings of the harassment through this subject matter.

Provenance

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The painting was in the collection of the artist Benedetto Luti by 1715, as he made mention of it in a letter that year to his patron Hofrat Bauer von Heffenstein, who was a councilor to Lothar Franz von Schönborn, archbishop of Mainz.[10] By 1719, the painting was part of the Schönborn collection.[10] Joseph Heller's 1845 guidebook to the Schönborn collection at Pommersfelden included the first published attribution to Artemisia.[3]

Impact

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Artist Kathleen Gilje created a work of art based on Gentileschi's painting in which she made one, more violent version of Gentileschi's painting in lead paint, then painted a copy of Gentileschi's original over top. An x-ray of Gilje's painting shows Gentileschi's version of Susanna overlaying a version that depicts the rage and pain of a rape victim. Gilje titled this piece Susanna and the Elders Restored.[11]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Treves, Letizia (2020). Artemisia. London: The National Gallery Company Ltd.
  2. ^ Modesti, Adelina (2016). "A newly discovered late work by Artemisia Gentileschi: Susanna and the Elders, 1652". In Barker, Sheila (ed.). Women Artists in Early Modern Italy, Careers, Fame, and Collectors. Turnhout: Harvey Miller. ISBN 9781909400351.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Christiansen, Keith; Mann, Judith (2001). Orazio and Artemesia Gentileschi. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  4. ^ a b c d Garrard, Mary R. (2001). Artemisia Gentileschi Around 1622 The shaping and Reshaping of an Artistic Identity. Los Angeles, California: Regents of the University of California. pp. 77–113. ISBN 978-0-520-22841-2.
  5. ^ a b c d e Grace, Sherrill (January 2004). "Life Without Instruction: Artemisia, and the Lesson of Perspective". Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches théâtrales au Canada. 25 (1).
  6. ^ a b c Slatkin, Wendy (1997). Women Artists in History. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Simon & Schuster. pp. 73–75. ISBN 978-0-13-432873-7.
  7. ^ a b c Locker, Jesse M. (2015). Artemisia Gentileschi: The Language of Painting. London. p. 48. ISBN 978-0-300-18511-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  8. ^ a b c d e Mann, Judith W. (2009). "Identity signs: meanings and methods in Artemisia Gentileschi's signatures". Wiley. 23 (1): 71–107. JSTOR 24417558.
  9. ^ Nowakowski, Teresa, Artemisia Gentileschi Painting Discovered in English Palace’s Storeroom, Smithsonian, September 25, 2023
  10. ^ a b "Immunity From Seizure: Artemisia" (PDF). The National Gallery, London.
  11. ^ Gilje, Kathleen (1998). "Susanna and the Elders, Restored - X-Ray".

References

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  • Christiansen, Keith; Mann, Judith, Orazio and Artemisia Gentileschi (Metropolitan Museum of Art 2001) pp. 296–299
  • Garrard, Mary R, Artemisia Gentileschi Around 1622 The Shaping and Reshaping of an Artistic Identity (Regents of the University of California 2001) pp. 77–113
  • Grace, Sherrill, Life without Instruction: Artemisia, and the Lesson of Perspective (University of British Columbia 2004) pp. 116–135
  • Locker, Jesse M., Artemisia Gentileschi: The Language of Painting (London 2015) pp. 48
  • Mann, Judith W., Identity Signs: Meaning and Methods in Artemisia Gentileschi Signatures (Wiley) pp. 71–107
  • Slatkin, Wendy, Women Artists in History (Upper Saddle River 1997) pp. 73–75