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Nicholson, Elizabeth S. G. "Diana Scultori." Italian Women Artists from Renaissance to Baroque: National Museum of Women in the Arts. Milano: Skira, 2007; Rocco, Patricia. The Devout Hand: Women, Virtue, and Visual Culture in Early Modern Italy, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2017 “Splendid Japanese Women Artists of the Edo Period”.
English Female Artists; Great Women Masters of Art; Women Painters of the World; By time period. List of 16th-century women artists.
Artemisia was aware of "her position as a female artist and the current representations of women's relationship to art". [60] This is evident in her allegorical self portrait, Self Portrait as "La Pittura" , which shows Artemisia as a muse, "symbolic embodiment of the art" and as a professional artist.
An "old master print" is an original print (for example an engraving, woodcut, or etching) made by an artist in the same period. The term "old master drawing" is used in the same way. In theory, "Old Master" applies only to artists who were fully trained, were Masters of their local artists' guild, and worked independently, but in practice ...
Los Angeles County Museum of Art: 72: Portrait of a 40-year-old Man: 1632: Oil on panel: 75.6 x 52.1: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York: 73: Portrait of a 39-year-old Woman: 1632: Oil on panel: 74.5 x 55: Nivaagaards Malerisamling: 74: The hand and the booklet were added by another painter Portrait of a 62-year-old Woman, possibly Aeltje ...
Garrard, Mary D., Angouissola and the Problem of the Woman Artist, Renaissance Quarterly 24, 1994. Zwanger, Meryl, Women and Art in the Renaissance, in: Sister, Columbia University 1995/6. Judith Brown. Gender and Society in Renaissance Italy (Women And Men In History). 1998; Letizia Panizza, Women in Italian Renaissance Culture and Society.
The Old Masters Gallery re-opened in 1960 after the reconstruction of the gallery building was completed. While the most important paintings survived this period, the losses were significant. Records from 1963 state that 206 paintings had been destroyed and 507 were missing. [ 1 ]
This is an incomplete list of Flemish painters, with place and date of birth and death, sorted by patronymic, and grouped according to century of birth.It includes painters such as Rubens from (or mostly active in) the Southern Netherlands, which is approximately the area of modern Flanders and modern Wallonia.