Less famous than Artemisia Gentileschi, Elisabetta Sirani, born this day 1638,
is my favourite Italian painter. She lived her belief in women’s abilities; she
was family breadwinner after her father’s arthritis stopped him working and she
founded a painting school for women open to non-aristocrats without connections.
Self-Portrait as Circe |
Although many of her subjects were bible scenes or saints, she read widely in
classical literature. and found inspiring ancient women heroes in Plutarch and
Ovid, amongst others. In stark contrast with her male contemporaries, she
painted most of them fully clothed and business-like.
Timoclea's Revenge |
The funniest is her
Timoclea of Thebes, calmly pushing into a well the brutish captain who had
raped her during Alexander’s conquest of Greece. But a close second is her
self-portrait as Circe, serenely mixing pharmaceuticals according to an
instruction manual, no man in sight, while staring the viewer straight in the
eye.
Her Cleopatra, usually depicted topless and miserable with a phallic snake,
is an alternative Cleopatra she found in Pliny: she is smiling, modestly clothed
and coiffed, proving her own enormous wealth to Antony by dissolving a pearl in
vinegar, but with Antony himself excised.
Lockdown home-hairdressers may relate
more to her ‘Berenice Cutting Her Hair’. Berenice was the wife of Ptolemy III who fulfilled
her vow that if he returned safely from war she would dedicate her
fabled long hair to her dead sort-of-mother-in-law Arsinoe II, worshipped as
Aphrodite. I like the tatty fringe and the gleeful look in her eye as she wields
the scissors, as if she had found an excuse to get rid of a tiresome burden while getting
moral kudos at the same time.
Feminist art critics debate whether her Portia (aka Porcia) is
a tough and feisty broad satirising Stoic masculinity or a victim of self-harming or sado-masochistic fantasies: the wife of Brutus, she wanted to prove to him that
she could conspire as well as anyone to assassinate a dictator. So she stabbed
herself in the thigh to prove she could stand pain and wouldn’t talk under
torture. I find this one most disturbing and will leave it to you to decide for
yourself.
Sadly, many of Sirani’s classical females have been lost, including a
Galatea, a Pamphile (the inventor of silk-weaving) and two of her three
paintings of Iole.
I particularly regret the lost Ioles, especially if one depicted
Iole’s escape from her aspiring rapist Heracles: she jumped off the wall of her
father’s palace in Oechalia to commit suicide, but her dress billowed out like a
parachute and she survived.
This story is told in an obscure work by an imitator
of Plutarch, but that would not have stopped Sirani discovering it. It would
make a great topic for an art competition for locked-down schoolchildren. This
gives me something to plan.
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