Saturday, February 3, 2024

Lavinia Fontana

Women have always worked, outside the domestic sphere, that is. Mothers have always worked outside the domestic sphere. Women who had the luxury of focusing solely on their own home and their own children were seen as being privileged in most past eras. From Barron's:
A recently discovered painting by the 16th-century artist Lavinia Fontana being offered at a Sotheby’s Old Master sale on Thursday is thought to be a self-portrait of the artist painted while she was pregnant. Fontana, considered the first woman artist to work professionally outside a convent or court system, supported her husband and children through her work, and painted several self portraits during her career, according to Sotheby’s. Her paintings fetched prices comparable to her peers at the time, including Anthony van Dyck, who also painted numerous self-portraits, including one being sold at Sotheby’s this week.

Noblewomen at the time “desired nothing more than to be portrayed by her,” because of the “frills” that “she portrays better than any man in the world,” the 17th-century Italian art historian and scholar Carlo Cesare Malvasia once wrote, according to Sotheby’s catalog note about the sale.

Portrait of a Pregnant Woman, Possibly a Self-Portrait, is being offered with an estimated price beginning at US$100,000. It depicts an elegantly dressed noblewoman resting her left hand on her pregnant belly. According to Sotheby’s, Fontana gave birth to 11 children. (Read more.)
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