Cleopatra (Artemisia Gentileschi, Milan)

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Year1611-1612
Mediumoil on canvas
MovementBaroque
Cleopatra
ArtistArtemisia Gentileschi
Year1611-1612
Mediumoil on canvas
MovementBaroque
Dimensions117.5 cm × 182 cm (46.3 in × 72 in)
LocationEtro collection, Milan

Cleopatra is a 1611-1612 oil on canvas painting of Cleopatra by Artemisia Gentileschi, now in the private Etro collection in Milan.

It is unquestionably from the Gentileschi workshop, but secure authorship to either Orazio or Artemisia is disputed.[1]

Subject matter

The painting depicts Cleopatra, the Egyptian queen, alone in the moments before she commits suicide by submitting to a venomous snakebite. A common theme for artists of the period, the artist may have drawn upon Plutarch's account which described her death from the bite of an asp.[2] The pose is based upon that of an ancient statue now known as Sleeping Ariadne, which had been thought to represent Cleopatra wearing a snake-like piece of jewelry on her arm.[2]

Attribution

Given the close collaboration between father and daughter at the start of Artemisia's career, art historians have struggled to achieve consensus on the attribution of this work. Keith Christiansen has argued this is the work of Orazio, given the masterful depiction of the textiles, for which he was renowned.[1] Mary D. Garrard advocates for an attribution to Artemisia, given the strong emotional tension of the piece,[3] while Letizia Treves cites the realistic rendering of the female form as conclusive evidence of Artemisia's authorship.[2]

History

See also

References

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