ArtemisiaArtemisia
Artemisia par Lapierre/Alexandra

Par " Lapierre/Alexandra"

Note moyenne : (sur 0 notes)
  • Livres 0/5
Robert Laffont, 1999-09-12 -ISBN 2221084012
Membres possédant Artemisia
Nombre de membres : 2 voir tous les membres
bibliothèque

lisette



  • Livres 0.00/5
bibliothèque

Moumoune



  • Livres 0.00/5
Critiques sur Artemisia
Nombre de critiques : 0 voir toutes les critiques

Soyez le premier à ajouter une critique
Citations tirées de Artemisia
Nombre de citations : 0 voir toutes les citations

Soyez le premier à ajouter une citation
Etiquettes sur Artemisia

histoire moyen âge roman historique

Acheter Artemisia avec
Fnac Proxis.be Alapage Amazon
Recommandations sur Artemisia

Description
  Lire       Modifier       Historique       Discussion     Suivi

Small wonder that biographer Alexandra Lapierre was drawn to write about Artemisia Gentileschi, one of the first female painters to gain acclaim in the male-dominated 17th-century art world. Her story has all the ingredients of high drama: rape, jealousy, and an infamous court trial set against a backdrop of art and passion. Meticulously researched, framed in a fictional context, Lapierre's treatment applies a painterly touch to a scholarly work. Billed as a biography in the U.K. but as a novel in the U.S., it combines the rigor of one genre with the page-turning immediacy of the other. Born in Rome to the artist Orazio Gentileschi and his wife Prudenzia, Artemisia's life was turned upside down after the death of her mother. Orazio jealously guarded his only daughter, refusing her outside contact even as he taught her the subtleties of painting. At 17, Artemisia, already a skilled artist, was facing a life of spinsterhood as her father's prisoner. Yet the Gentileschi household was full of the comings and goings of artists whose shifting allegiances were as complex as the politics of the time. When Orazio's friend, arrogant trompe l'oeil master Agostino Tassi, set his sights on young Artemisia, her refusals only stoked his passion. What followed was rape. Tassi kept her quiet through promises of marriage; when marriage was not forthcoming, Tassi found himself in court. Even under torture, Artemisia's statement never wavered, and eventually Tassi was convicted. The mild sentence scarcely harmed him, yet the experience had a lasting effect on his victim. Touched by scandal, Artemisia was able to marry an inferior painter only by virtue of a substantial dowry. Through an unhappy marriage, the deaths of her first children, and the lives of her daughters, however, she continued to paint, eventually gaining considerable acclaim. Interestingly enough, given her experiences, her paintings of religious allegory often portrayed women in illustrations