Artemisia Gentileschi, Warrior Painter

see also

International Trailer

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Artemisia Gentileschi, Warrior Painter (Artemisia Gentileschi, pittrice guerriera)

Artemisia Gentileschi, Warrior Painter (Artemisia Gentileschi, pittrice guerriera)

original title:

Artemisia Gentileschi, pittrice guerriera

directed by:

cast:

Angela Curri, Melissa Pignataro

screenplay:

cinematography:

editing:

country:

Italy

year:

2020

film run:

63'

format:

colour

release date:

25/11/2020

festivals & awards:

  • Festa do Cinema Italiano 2021: Amarcord
  • Visioni dal Mondo 2020: Italian Panorama
  • Terra di Siena International Film Festival 2020: Best Documentary, Special mention to actress Angela Curri
  • Global Nonviolent Film Festival 2020: Best Feature Docudrama
  • Los Angeles Cinematography 2020: Awards Finalist
  • Human Rights Film Festival 2020: Official Selection
  • European Cinematography Awards 2020: Best Documentary Film

In 1618, at the age of 23, Artemisia became the first Italian female artist to get international recognition. She came in touch with the most brilliant minds of her time, including Caravaggio. The film recalls her life, for which she is recognized as a modern feminist icon, due to her personality and the unyielding defense of her professional integrity, documented in the letters she wrote to art collectors and other eminent figures of her time, like Galileo Galilei. Artemisia’s fame is also tied to the rape trial she started against a colleague, Agostino Tassi. She survived the experience thanks to her moral strength and, through her painting, succeeded as a woman and as an artist, producing masterpieces that can touch the heart and soul of audiences who admire them four hundred years later.
An oneiric journey through her masterworks, kept in the most preeminent museums all around the world (including the Detroit Institute of Arts, the Palacio Real de Madrid, and Galleria Spada in Rome), as well as in private collections, like the ‘Aurora’ (1627), featured for the first time in Ultra HD 4K or the 'David and Goliath' dated 1639, and recently discovered in London thanks to British conservator-restorer Simon Gillespie, who in this documentary gave an exclusive interview and he explains what David's sword was like after careful restoration to reveal the identity of the author of the painting, namely Artemisia.