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Saturday, November 23, 2024 |
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National Gallery of Art acquires painting by Lavinia Fontana and a statue by Luisa Roldán |
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Luisa Roldán, "Virgin and Child" c. 1680/1686. Painted wood. Overall: 56.52 x 24.45 x 16.99 cm (22 1/4 x 9 5/8 x 6 11/16 in.) National Gallery of Art, Washington Pepita Milmore Memorial Fund, Patrons Permanent Fund and William and Buffy Cafritz Family Sculpture Fund 2022.39.1
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WASHINGTON, DC.- This highly detailed and exquisite portrait depicts the 16th-century musician Lucia Bonasoni Garzoni (b. 1561at least 1610) by the most productive woman artist of the late 16th century, the Bolognese painter Lavinia Fontana. This portrait is among Fontana's best preserved and most accomplished surviving works in the genre. A rare depiction of a 16th-century woman musician by a 16th-century woman artist, this painting tells the story of two accomplished women who were able to overcome obstacles in a patriarchal society to succeed in the artistic spheres of painting and music.
Fontana died just before her 62nd birthday after a highly successful career. Trained by her father, Prospero Fontana (15121597), in the late mannerist style, and most famous for her portraits of noblewomen, she produced her first dateable works around 1575. In addition to portraits, she painted secular and religious subjects, including altarpieces for churches (a rarity in the period), portraits of scholars, and mythological nudesa subject that was unheard of for women in the period. In 1577, Fontana married Gian Paolo Zappi (c. 15551615), who acted as her business manager; she supported her family, which included 11 children, with the profits from her painting. Fontana is one of 68 known women artists from Bologna in the early modern period and was a trailblazer for women artists who succeeded her.
Acquisition: First Statue Created Before 1850 by Female Sculptor Luisa Roldán
This small carved wood and painted statue by Luisa Roldán is the first work by a woman sculptor from before c. 1850 to enter the National Gallery's collection. Widely accepted as a work by Roldán on stylistic grounds, it shares close similarities with a range of sculptures that are widely acknowledged to be by her.
Born in Seville, Roldán was the daughter of Pedro Roldán, one of the city's most accomplished sculptors. Her introduction to sculpture most likely came from Pedro, with whom she worked in close partnership. At the age of 19, she left home to marry one of her father's studio assistants, with whom she set up a workshop and began undertaking commissions. Some of her earliest works, identifiable by style, include various life-size figures in painted wood for altarpieces in Seville and processional floats (paseos) that reflect but differ from her father's style.
In 1688 Roldán and her husband moved to Madrid, likely in expectation of an appointment at the court of King Carlos II. Eventually she was awarded the royal title of escultora de cámara, which did not prove especially lucrative. She turned to specializing in painted terracotta scenes. When Felipe V ascended to the throne in 1701, she was reappointed to the Spanish court. Lauded for her accomplishments as a sculptor, she nevertheless died destitute, unable to pay for a funeral. On the day she died, she received recognition as an "Accademica di merito" from the Accademia di San Luca in Rome.
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