Introduction by Susan Sontag
First published in 1953, Artemisia
is a classic of 20th century Italian
literature. From its first publication in 1953, Artemisia, a novel about
Artemisia Gentileschi, an iconic 17th century painter, by Anna Banti, a
brilliant Italian art historian, established itself as a feminist masterpiece.
Like Penelope Fitzgerald’s The Blue Flower
and Marguerite Yourcenar’s Memoirs of Hadrian, Artemisia
is a book about the process of artistic
creation.
Much in Gentileschi’s life marked her out as a victim – rape at
the age of 18, a forced marriage to a man she did not love and, a
powerful, patriarchal father, Orazio Gentileschi, who failed to value her
artistic genius. But Gentileschi did not accept the status of victim, in the
years between 1610 and 1650; she produced over 50 paintings that
have established her as one of the great painters of all time.
She gave up everything – “all tenderness, all claim to feminine
virtues” to dedicate herself solely to painting. Sacrifices that Anna Banti,
herself an artist, fully understands and captures in this amazing novel.
Republished at a time when appreciation of Gentileschi’s art is at its
highest, Artemisia
gives us the key to understanding the genius of this
feminist icon.
“What makes Artemisia
a great book – and unique in Banti’s
work – is this double destiny, of a book lost and re-created. A book that
by being posthumous, rewritten, resurrected, gained incalculably in
emotional reach and moral authority. A metaphor for literature,
perhaps. And a metaphor for reading, militant reading – which, at
its worthiest, is rereading – too.” Susan Sontag