Art on the Tenth Sunday after Pentecost, Proper 12B

It happened, late one afternoon when David rose from his couch and was walking about on the roof of the king’s house, that he saw from the roof a woman bathing; the woman was very beautiful.

Bathsheba at Her Bath, oil on canvas, 1636-37, Artemisia Gentileschi, 1593-1656

Reading: 2 Samuel 11:1-15

Commentary by Hovak Najarian
 

 Bathsheba at Her Bath is one of several versions of this subject painted by Artemisia Gentileschi.  In each of them the focus is primarily on Bathsheba with King David observing her from a distance.  

In this scene, Bathsheba is relaxed and seems to be interested only in her grooming.   She, and the two women assisting her in the foreground, are occupied with details associated with her bath and there is no indication they are aware of being watched by King David.

While Bathsheba was at home in Jerusalem, her husband, Uriah, was serving in King David’s army in a war with the Ammonites.  David remained in Jerusalem during this war and everyday activities on the home front continued.  On the day Bathsheba was bathing she was in an open-air walled area where she would not be noticed by people at street level but David was at a higher vantage point and could see her.

In Artemisia’s painting, Bathsheba’s bath is almost complete.  She is combing her long hair while an attendant is wiping her legs.  Another attendant is braiding a portion of her hair and in the background at the upper left, King David is looking at her from a balcony of his Venetian styled palace (He is being shielded from the sun by an attendant with a parasol).  Though David is a minor figure in this composition, he is a major player in the events that followed.

Detail (enlarged), David observing Bathsheba.

 David was struck by Bathsheba’s beauty and desired to be with her.  He sent word for her to come to his palace and this resulted in an inappropriate relationship.  Bathsheba became pregnant.  In order for David to make it seem like he was not the father of the expected child, Uriah was called back from his military duties to spend time with his wife.  Uriah, a highly disciplined military man, however, did not go to his wife.   This did not turn out as David hoped so Uriah was sent back to the battlefield and placed in the thick of action where he would be killed.  After Uriah’s death, David married Bathsheba but the child that was conceived, died. 


In early paintings of Bathsheba, she was portrayed as an innocent victim of King David.   The biblical account indicates David, in his position of power, took advantage of her.  By the seventeenth century, however, it was suggested Bathsheba was flattered by the attention she received and might have been a willing participant … even a temptress.  This second interpretation seems to have grown out of fantasy; there is no factual information to support it. 


After the concept of art and artist was established in the fifteenth century, the making of art became a trade.  Artists established workshops and sought commissions from wealthy patrons and the Church.  In these artist’s workshops the men in a family often worked alongside their father, whereas young women were expected to pursue domestic skills.  Unlike traditional roles of women in her time, however, Artemisia apprenticed in the workshop of her well-known father, Orazio, and acquired the skills and insights that enabled her to establish a career in a field dominated by men.  In subject matter, she often turned to events in the Bible in which women played important roles or performed heroic deeds.

Hovak Najarian © 2024

Art note

When Artemisia was young, her mother died and she, along with her brothers, joined her father in his art workshop.  She was more serious about art than her brothers and wanted to learn all she could from her father, Orazio.  
Her father, like many artists who settled in Rome at that time, was influenced by Caravaggio and Artemisia also took an early interest in Caravaggio’s work.  She did not limit herself to portraits and flowers (subjects expected of women who painted) but often took on subjects with emotional content.   Although she was very gifted and recognized as such among other artists of her time, women artists tended to be overlooked by art historians and it was not until around mid-twentieth century that she began to be recognized for her achievements.

More: Artemisia Gentileschi (Wikipedia)

Image

Wikimedia Commons

B Proper 12, Art for July 29, 2012

SALVIATI, Cecchino del
(b. 1510, Firenze, d. 1563, Roma)
Click to open Web Gallery of Art Artist Biography and to explore other works by this artist.

Bathsheba Goes to King David
1552-54
Fresco
Palazzo Sacchetti, RomeClick to open Web Gallery of Art commentary page. Click image for large view.

Related art commentary by Hovak Najarian.

Bathsheba Goes to King David, 1552-1554, Fresco, Cecchino del Salviati (1510-1563)

Commentary by Hovak Najarian

Related post B Proper 12, Art for July 29, 2012

As a young man, Francisco de’Rossi (before taking the name Cecchino del Salviati), studied with several artists in Florence, the city of his birth. Among his teachers was Andrea del Sarto, whose skills were so highly regarded he was called, “the faultless painter.” After two years in del Sarto’s studio, de’Rossi’s left to work on an unfinished fresco at the palace of Cardinal Giovanni Salviati in Rome and through his connections, further commissions were received. While there, he also determined it would be a good career move to take his patron’s surname as his own. Now, in addition to the name, Cecchino del Salviati, he continues to be known by his given name, Francisco de’Rossi, as well as Francisco Salviati and Il Salviati.

As the classicism of the Renaissance waned, Mannerist characteristics increased. In painting, sculpture, and architecture of this period there was frequently novelty, artificiality, discrepancy in scale, and linear movement (Vasari referred to this as a “serpentine line”). Also, in many Mannerist works there was a manipulation of pictorial space. Instead of staying with the exactness of Renaissance perspective, they modified space and often made it ambiguous; at times, a viewer is unable to determine what the artist was intending. In his paintings, Salviati used many of these Mannerist devices; note particularly the background, curvilinear staircase, and Bathsheba’s melodramatic pose in Bathsheba Goes to King David

This painting of Bathsheba is one of the frescos based on the life of King David painted by Salviati at the Palazzo Sacchetti in Rome. The presentation of this story, however, differs from the usual paintings of Bathsheba. In a typical painting, Bathsheba is bathing while King David is ogling her from the rooftop of his palace. Often, the primary focus is on a voluptuous Bathsheba at her bath. Salviati moves this story forward to the time she has come to the palace to see David. It is a rather unusual painting in that Salviati presents us with a look at Bathsheba from both back and front as she pauses before ascending the stairs. In the lower right corner of this painting we see her from the back; her fingers are lifting a portion of her dress coquettishly. Her left hand is holding her outer garment and she is turning her head to the left. Next we see her again at the foot of a spiral staircase. Bathsheba is now in the same pose but we see her from an opposite point of view; from the front we are shown she is wearing a diaphanous dress. At the top of the stairs King David is in a toga and finally the sequence ends in the shadow of David’s chamber where we are given a glimpse of the couple embracing.

Note

Venus, Bathsheba and Odalisque: In art, the portrayal of Venus was not to be seen in medieval art; Mary was the image venerated during those years. During the Renaissance, Mary continued to be honored but Venus made a comeback. Not only did artists paint scenes of the dalliances of Venus and other goddesses but the Bible also became a source of titillating subjects such as Bathsheba. Later, in the nineteenth century, the romanticists were enamored with the exotic Near East and in art the odalisque (harem woman) replaced Venus as one of the favorite subjects.

Color: When black pigment is added to a color it is called a “shade.” When white pigment is added it becomes a “tint.” When water based paints are absorbed into wet plaster (as when painting a fresco) the white of the plaster combines with the pigment and this makes its color a little lighter; it becomes, in effect, a “tint.” Also it decreases the saturation (intensity) of the colors, thus frescos tend to be soft in tone.

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© 2012 Hovak Najarian