Giulia Lama

Giulia Lama (1 October 1681 – 7 October 1747)[1] was an Italian painter, active in Venice. Her dark, tense style contrasted with the dominant pastel colors of the late Baroque era.[2]

Giulia Lama
Portrait of Giulia Lama
by Giovanni Battista Piazzetta
Born(1681-10-01)October 1, 1681
Venice, Italy
DiedOctober 7, 1747(1747-10-07) (aged 66)
Venice, Italy
NationalityItalian
Known forPainting

Biography

Lama was born in the parish of Santa Maria Formosa in Venice. She was trained initially by her father, the painter Agostino Lama. She may have studied alongside a childhood friend, Giambattista Piazzetta (1682–1754), at the Scuola di Antonio Molinari in Venice. As a result of learning together their styles are similar in the sharp contrasts of light and shade. Piazzetta painted a portrait of his friend in c.1715–1720.

A letter written by the Abate Conti to Madame de Caylus in March 1728 has been important in determining Lama's background and character. He remarks, "The poor girl is persecuted by the painters, but her virtue triumphs over her enemies. It is true that she is as ugly as she is witty but she speaks with grace and precision, so that one easily forgives her her face."[3] The letter reveals that in addition to being a painter she was skilled in mathematics, poetry, and lace making.[3]

Giulia Lama's Judith and Holofernes

Lama was active as a historical painter and poet in Venice from till after 1753. One of her pieces, a Crucifixion altarpiece, remains in situ at San Vitale. She had a successful career in private and public figure painting. Lama appears to have been one of the first women to break the barrier against women studying and drawing the nude figure from life.[4] Over 200 drawings that were recently discovered clearly show that she indeed studied both male and female nude figures during her training. She had public success in a style that was typically a position held by men, giving rise to opposition from her male counterparts who were not prepared to tolerate such competition.

As a highly trained professional, she was just as capable of painting a sensitive portrait such as Young Man with a Turban as she was of carrying out large, original commissions, such as altarpieces, with confidence. It is through the identification of three such altarpieces in a Venetian guidebook of 1733 that Lama's artistic personality began to be reconstructed. That she was as fully competent as the male artists with whom she competed is demonstrated by the names to which her work has been attributed. Recovery of Lama's oeuvre has required reattribution of works by not only Piazzetta, but also artists such as Federico Bencovich, Domenico Maggiotto, Francesco Capella, and Zurbarán, among others.

Notes

  1. Buchholz, E. L. (2003). Women Artists. Germany: Prestel. p. 40. ISBN 3791329677
  2. Weidemann, Christiane, Petra Larass, and Melanie Klier. 50 Women Artists You Should Know. Munich: Prestel, 2008. ISBN 9783791339566. Page 45.
  3. Gaze, D. (1997) Dictionary of Women Artists: 2. London: Fitzroy Dearborn. p. 820. ISBN 1884964214
  4. "Lama, Giulia". Grove Art Online. 2003
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References

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