Mary Magdalene in Ecstasy

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Mary Magdalene in Ecstasy
Oil on canvas
Dimensions81 cm × 105 cm (32 in × 41 in)
LocationPrivate European collection

Mary Magdalene in Ecstasy is a painting by the Italian baroque artist Artemisia Gentileschi. It is in the Doge’s Palace in Venice.

Description

A woman is shown in a seated position, with her head leaning back and hands clasped around her knee. She wears a purple and ochre gown over a lace-trimmed white chemise. As she leans back, her wavy blond hair cascades behind her and the chemise has slipped down, exposing her right shoulder. Her eyes are closed as she sits in a darkened landscape, strongly illuminated by a light source from the right of the painting.

Gentileschi's Interpretation

It is one of many paintings by Gentileschi of the Magdalene but the depiction is unusual for the period. The 2020 exhibition catalogue on Artemisia notes that "Mary Magdalene is more usually shown penitent in a landscape ... [here] she is passionately alive and in the throes of ecstatic rapture."[1] The connection to (the various existing copies of) Caravaggio's Mary Magdalen in Ecstasy has been made. They both show more of Mary Magdalene's flesh and shoulder than versions by other artists, suggesting an erotic charge to the devotional scene.[1] Other symbols that were typically used to demonstrate her repentance—skull, candle, ointment jar—are absent, leading art historians to focus on the more sensual feel of the painting in their identification and attribution.[1]

Provenance

The painting was virtually unknown until a 2011 article revealed an old photograph of it. [2][3] Research subsequently confirmed its existence in a private French collection.[4] In 2014, it was sold in Paris for €865,000 (approx. $1.15 million USD at the time), more than €600,000 Euros above the asking price—a record price at the time for a work by Gentileschi. That record was broken in 2018 with the sale of her Self-Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria.[5]

There is no precise date for the painting; the first half of the 1620s has been suggested. The painting is in a private European collection.[1]

  • Photo found by Gianni Papi on which he based his 2011 attribution
    Photo found by Gianni Papi on which he based his 2011 attribution

See also

References

  1. ^ .
  2. ^ "Sotheby's Offers Lost Artemisia Gentileschi Masterpiece". artnet News. 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2020-05-02.
  3. ^ Artemisia Gentileschi: Milan, by Gianni Papi, The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 153, No. 1305 (December 2011), pp. 846-847
  4. ^ "Immunity From Seizure: Artemisia" (PDF). The National Gallery, London. The National Gallery, London.
  5. ^ "Artemisia Gentileschi - Mary Magdalene in Ectsasy". Sotheby's. Tableaux Et Dessins Anciens Et Du XIXe Siècle. 26 June 2014. Retrieved 2 May 2020.