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Photographing the ceiling at Marlborough House
Orazio Gentileschi (1563-1639) & Artemisia Gentileschi (1593-1652)

Personification of Painting c.1635-8

193 cm diameter (sight) (sight diameter) | RCIN 408466

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This is one of the corner roundels depicting the personifications of the Arts, part of the ceiling decoration of An Allegory of Peace and the Arts. Painted by Orazio Gentileschi, for Queen Henrietta Maria, c.1636-8, the ceiling decorated the Great Hall at the Queen's House Greenwich until about 1711, when Queen Anne granted it to her favourite, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, and it was transferred to her new residence Marlborough House on Pall Mall, now the Commonwealth Secretariat.

The ceiling celebrates the benign rule of Charles I when peace and the liberal arts could flourish.The four roundels of the Arts at each corner together with the four panels of the Nine Muses frame the central tondo (RCIN 408464).

Here, the personification of Painting is a seated woman in a flowing blue, green and white robes. She is in the act of painting in grisaille the armed figure of Minerva.

It is now thought that Artemisia, Orazio’s daughter, may have assisted her father with his last commission. She probably arrived in London early in 1638, and if the ceiling was installed at the end of that year, she could have had time to paint some of Muses and personifications of the Arts in the outer canvases. These figures often have the dramatic chiaroscuro and more powerful physiques of Artemisia’s work compared to the refined and artificial style of her father.