Judith Slaying Holofernes

The Warrior Archetype

Judith Slaying Holofernes

Artemisia Gentileschi

c. 1614–1620

Currently At

Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy

Created

c. 1614–1620

Italian Baroque · Early 17th Century

Commissioned By

Cosimo II de' Medici (attributed)

Original painting · Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy · Click to enlarge

Sacred Feminine Prints edition · Cathedral arch frame · Click to enlarge

The Commission

Artemisia Gentileschi painted at least two major versions of Judith Slaying Holofernes — the earlier version (c. 1611–1612, Museo di Capodimonte, Naples) and the more celebrated Uffizi version (c. 1614–1620). The Uffizi painting was likely created for Cosimo II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, who was an active patron of Artemisia's work after she relocated to Florence in 1613. The commission came at a pivotal moment in her career: she had just become the first woman admitted to the Accademia delle Arti del Disegno in Florence, and the Medici court provided both financial security and artistic freedom. The painting was recorded in the Medici inventories and remained in Florentine collections until it entered the Uffizi permanently.

The Painter

Artemisia Gentileschi

Artemisia Gentileschi (1593–c. 1656) was the most celebrated female painter of the Italian Baroque and one of the most technically accomplished artists of her generation, regardless of gender. Born in Rome to the painter Orazio Gentileschi, she trained in her father's workshop and absorbed the revolutionary chiaroscuro technique of Caravaggio — the dramatic use of light and shadow that defined the Baroque aesthetic. In 1611, she was raped by the painter Agostino Tassi, a colleague of her father's. The subsequent trial — in which she was tortured with thumbscrews to verify her testimony — became one of the most documented cases of sexual violence in art history. Artemisia survived, married, moved to Florence, and channeled her experience into a body of work obsessively focused on powerful women in moments of violent agency: Judith, Susanna, Lucretia, Cleopatra. She worked for the Medici in Florence, the Este in Modena, King Charles I in London, and Philip IV of Spain. Her letters reveal a sharp business mind and fierce professional pride. She died in Naples around 1656, celebrated but never fully accorded the canonical status she deserved — a correction that art history has been making ever since.

The Commissioner

Cosimo II de' Medici (attributed)

Cosimo II de' Medici (1590–1621) was the fourth Grand Duke of Tuscany and one of the most significant art patrons of the early seventeenth century. Though his reign was brief — he died at thirty years old from tuberculosis — he transformed the Florentine court into a beacon of scientific and artistic innovation. He was the patron who famously supported Galileo Galilei, appointing him as court mathematician and philosopher in 1610 after Galileo dedicated his Sidereus Nuncius to him. Cosimo's court was unusually receptive to unconventional talent, which explains his interest in Artemisia — a woman working in a field almost entirely dominated by men. His patronage gave Artemisia the social legitimacy she needed to establish herself as an independent master, and the Uffizi Judith is widely considered the masterwork she produced under his protection.

Historical Context · Italian Baroque · Early 17th Century

Early seventeenth-century Italy was a world of violent contradiction: the Counter-Reformation Church wielded enormous cultural power, demanding art that was emotionally overwhelming and doctrinally correct, while the courts of Florence, Rome, and Naples competed to attract the most daring painters, sculptors, and scientists. The Medici Grand Duchy was at its cultural apex — Galileo was mapping the moons of Jupiter from the same city where Artemisia was painting Judith. Women had almost no legal personhood: they could not own property, sign contracts, or appear in court without a male guardian. Artemisia's career was therefore not just artistically remarkable but legally extraordinary. The Baroque style itself — with its theatrical lighting, psychological intensity, and unflinching depiction of violence — was the perfect vehicle for her subject matter. The Judith story was a popular Counter-Reformation theme because it combined piety, female virtue, and the defeat of tyranny, but no painter before or after Artemisia depicted it with such physical and psychological conviction.

The Myth

Hebrew Bible · Book of Judith · Bethulia, ancient Judea · c. 6th century BCE (narrative setting)

The Book of Judith, part of the deuterocanonical scriptures, tells the story of a beautiful, devout widow living in the besieged city of Bethulia. The Assyrian general Holofernes, commander of Nebuchadnezzar's army, has surrounded the city and cut off its water supply. The elders of Bethulia are on the verge of surrendering. Judith, whose name literally means "Jewish woman," devises a plan alone. She dresses in her finest clothes, takes her maidservant Abra, and walks into the Assyrian camp, presenting herself as a defector with intelligence to offer. Holofernes, entranced by her beauty, invites her to a private banquet. He drinks himself into a stupor. Judith waits until he is unconscious, takes his own sword, and beheads him in two strokes. She and Abra carry his head back to Bethulia in a food bag. When the Assyrian army discovers their general's decapitated body the next morning, they flee in panic. Bethulia is saved. Judith is celebrated as the savior of her people — a warrior who used beauty, intelligence, and nerve where armies had failed. The story has been interpreted as an allegory of Israel's resistance to foreign domination, a meditation on divine justice, and a celebration of female agency in a world that denied women any formal power.

Why It Matters Today

Artemisia's Judith has become one of the defining images of feminist art history — not because it is about feminism in any anachronistic sense, but because it depicts a woman doing something that women were not supposed to do: taking decisive, lethal action in a world that demanded their passivity. The painting's power lies in its refusal of sentimentality. Judith does not look triumphant or horrified — she looks focused, competent, and determined. She is doing a job. In an era when women's anger is still policed, when survivors of sexual violence are still disbelieved, and when female ambition is still coded as threatening, Artemisia's Judith remains radical. The painting has been claimed by the #MeToo movement, by feminist scholars, by artists from Kara Walker to Cindy Sherman. It hangs in the Uffizi surrounded by centuries of male-painted women as passive objects of beauty — and it refuses every one of those conventions. To own a print of this work is to place that refusal on your wall.

Own This Piece

Judith Slaying Holofernes

Cathedral arch frame · 2ft × 4ft · Limited edition print

$460

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