The Daily Telegraph

Feminist icon’s influence over the centuries

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Artemisia Gentilesch­i, the only contempora­ry female follower of Caravaggio, has attracted her own following not just in the visual arts but also in film and literature.

She has a position both as a feminist icon, who grappled with the not always beneficial attentions of the opposite sex, but also as an exponent of a robust style of figurative painting. An exhibition at the Robilant + Voena gallery in Mayfair titled The Gentilesch­i

Effect, strewn with the artist’s pictures of elegant men, rumbustiou­s women and severed male heads, and showing alongside works by her colleagues, students and artists working today, demonstrat­es her influence over the centuries.

Included is a rare work that is thought to be by her daughter, Prudentia (priced at €180,000/ £160,000), an artist by whom no signed works are known, and a recent work by Francesco Vezzoli, one of Italy’s foremost contempora­ry artists.

For gallery owners Edmondo di Robilant and Marco Voena, The Gentilesch­i Effect could translate into millions. It was they, for instance, who discovered a self-portrait of the artist as Saint Catherine of Alexandria (circa 1615-17) in a Paris auction last year. Estimated at €300,000, they bought the painting for €2.4million, and then sold it to the National Gallery this summer, for €3.6million.

This year, they exhibited a mere fragment of a larger painting by Gentilesch­i, Allegory of Fame (1630-35), at the European Fine Art Fair in New York, where it sold to an American collector for $250,000 (£196,000). In the current Mayfair exhibition, they have a full-length portrait of a man, which they bought incorrectl­y attributed in New York about 15 years ago, later establishi­ng it as a portrait by Gentilesch­i of Antoine de Ville. The collector they subsequent­ly sold it to has now returned it to the gallery, where it has a $2.8million price tag.

Sanctions and the UK’S plans to withhold visas from Russian oligarchs did not appear to unduly affect last week’s Russian art sales in London, which amassed a respectabl­e £35million – a 46per cent increase on this time last year.

Although an average 40 per cent of the lots offered went unsold, strong bidding for classic Tsarist and modern 20th-century material made up the difference. In this market, sellers who bought before the 21st-century Russian art boom can benefit handsomely. A huge c1900 painting by Konstantin Makovsky, for instance, of an aristocrat­ic boyar’s Blind Man’s Bluff party, last appeared at auction in 1992 in New York, when it sold for $110,000. Last week, it fetched £5.5million, a record for the artist.

 ??  ?? Rare work: Allegory of Rhetoric is thought to be by Artemisia Gentilesch­i’s daughter Prudentia, an artist by whom no known works are signed
Rare work: Allegory of Rhetoric is thought to be by Artemisia Gentilesch­i’s daughter Prudentia, an artist by whom no known works are signed

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