The Daily Telegraph

National Gallery’s first female work in 27 years is ‘unsung’ Gentilesch­i

- By Hannah Furness ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

THE National Gallery has acquired its first work by a woman in nearly 30 years, a £3.6 million painting that it hopes will help to realise a “long-held dream” of redressing its lack of female artists.

The self-portrait by Artemisia Gentilesch­i will become just the 21st painting by a female artist held in the gallery’s permanent collection, with women making up less than 1 per cent of its 2,300 works.

The oil painting, dated from 1615-17, was acquired using funds from trusts and major donors and depicts the artist as Saint Catherine of Alexandria in a rare and newly discovered self-portrait which came to light at a French auction last year.

Hannah Rothschild, who in 2015 became the first woman to chair the National Gallery Board of Trustees, said: “The acquisitio­n of this great painting by Artemisia Gentilesch­i realises a long-held dream of increasing the National Gallery’s collection of paintings by important women artists.

“Gentilesch­i was a pioneer, a master storytelle­r, and one of the most progressiv­e and expressive painters of the period. One of a handful of women who was able to shatter the confines of her time, she overcame extreme personal difficulti­es to succeed in the art of painting.”

Gentilesch­i, a follower of Caravaggio, was the first female member of the Accademia del Disegno in Florence, painting works for notable contempora­ries including the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Charles I of England, and Philip IV of Spain. Born in 1593, she trained under her father, the painter Orazio Gentilesch­i, whose works are already in the National Gallery.

In 1611, she was raped by Agostino Tassi, a collaborat­or of her father’s, with a subsequent seven-month court case seeing her humiliated and physically tortured as she testified.

The National Gallery said: “Her biography has long overshadow­ed her artistic achievemen­ts, but she is now recognised as one of the most talented painters of her generation.”

Artemisia Gentilesch­i’s paintings have often been interprete­d as autobiogra­phical, usually featuring strong female heroines, repeatedly based on her own image and utilised as a symbol of feminist empowermen­t.

Self Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria includes a broken spiked wheel, which Catherine escaped before being beheaded and martyred.

The painting’s new owner was tracked down by curators from the National Gallery and a sale was arranged for £3.6million thanks to major donations from the American Friends of the National Gallery, the National Gallery Trust, Art Fund’s Sir Denis Mahon legacy, Lord and Lady Sassoon, Lady Getty, and Hannah Rothschild.

It will be conserved before going on display early next year.

The National Gallery currently has 20 other works by women in its collection. The first was bought in 1878, Portrait of a Man by Catharina van Hemessen c.1552. The latest, a series of five works by Paula Rego, were presented in 1991.

‘Gentilesch­i was a pioneer, a master storytelle­r, and one of the most progressiv­e painters of the period’

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 ??  ?? Hannah Rothschild, above, wants the National Gallery to exhibit more works by female artists; Gentilesch­i’s painting, right, is only the 21st in their collection.
Hannah Rothschild, above, wants the National Gallery to exhibit more works by female artists; Gentilesch­i’s painting, right, is only the 21st in their collection.

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