A woman of genius
Country Life UK|July 26, 2023
I KNOW people’s tempers from their faces,’ claimed preeminent 18th-century pastel portraitist Rosalba Carriera and images reproduced in Angela Oberer’s engrossing illustrated biography of the artist—the latest in Lund Humphries’s ‘Illuminating Women Artists’ series—testify to her out-of-the-ordinary insight
Kate Green
A woman of genius

Hailed by Parisian patrons of the 1720s as the ‘Queen of Pastel’, Carriera, Miss Oberer argues, became ‘the most internationally famous Venetian painter in her lifetime’. It’s not hard to see why.

Carriera was born 350 years ago, in 1673, the daughter of a Venetian lawyer. Excluded by her sex from any form of artistic training, this prodigious autodidact learnt by copying anything to hand. She forged a career in a hostile art market by confining herself from the outset to genres characterised by her contemporaries as ‘female’, including decorative miniatures, at first painted for snuff-box lids, and portraiture.

There was little, however, that was ‘female’ in Carriera’s approach to her hard-won career. Publicly, she downplayed any interest in making a living, but, by contrast, her diary is clogged with financial details. The mature Carriera did not have qualms about charging her clients fees widely regarded as exorbitant—most successfully, too. At her death in 1757, the octogenarian painter left assets valued at 24,556 zecchini, nearly 10 times Canaletto’s fortune. The annual cost of living in Carriera’s Venice has been estimated at 15 zecchini per person.

Bu hikaye Country Life UK dergisinin July 26, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

Bu hikaye Country Life UK dergisinin July 26, 2023 sayısından alınmıştır.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

COUNTRY LIFE UK DERGISINDEN DAHA FAZLA HIKAYETümünü görüntüle
A tapestry of pinks
Country Life UK

A tapestry of pinks

THE garden is now entering its season of vigour and exuberance.

time-read
3 dak  |
May 29, 2024
Bringing the past to life
Country Life UK

Bringing the past to life

An event hosted by COUNTRY LIFE at WOW!house is one of the highlights of a programme that features some of the biggest names in interior design

time-read
1 min  |
May 29, 2024
This isle is full of wonder
Country Life UK

This isle is full of wonder

GEOLOGY? A bit like economics, the famously boring science? I confess I suffered the prejudice—agriculture and history being my thing, both of them vital in every sense— but Robert Muir-Wood’s voyage through the past 66 million years of the making of the British landscape has biblical-level drama on almost every other page. Flood, fire, ice… or, perhaps, the formation in rock, sand, mud and lava of these isles is best conceived of as fierce poetry.

time-read
6 dak  |
May 29, 2024
Empire protest
Country Life UK

Empire protest

Without meaning to issue a clarion call for independence, E. M. Forster perfectly captured the rising tensions of the British Raj. One hundred years later, Matthew Dennison revisits the masterpiece A Passage to India

time-read
4 dak  |
May 29, 2024
Hops and dreams
Country Life UK

Hops and dreams

A relative of marijuana, hops were a Teutonic introduction to British brewing culture and gave rise to the original working holiday

time-read
2 dak  |
May 29, 2024
Life and sol
Country Life UK

Life and sol

The sanctuary of the Balearic Islands has enchanted a multitude of creative minds, from Robert Graves to David Bowie

time-read
4 dak  |
May 29, 2024
'Nature is nowhere as great as in its smallest creatures'
Country Life UK

'Nature is nowhere as great as in its smallest creatures'

Giving himself neck ache from constantly looking upwards, John Lewis-Stempel makes the most of a sunny May day harvesting ‘tree hay’ and marvelling at the myriad wildlife including flies and earwigs–that reside on bark

time-read
4 dak  |
May 29, 2024
'Plans are worthless, but planning is everything'
Country Life UK

'Plans are worthless, but planning is everything'

Country houses great and small were indispensable to D-Day preparations, with electricity and sanitation, well-stocked wine cellars, countesses to run the canteens and antique furniture to feed the stoves

time-read
7 dak  |
May 29, 2024
The darling buds of May
Country Life UK

The darling buds of May

May Morris shared her father’s passion for flowers, embroidery and Iceland, but was much more than William’s daughter. Influential both as a designer and as a teacher, she championed the rights of workers, particularly women, as Huon Mallalieu reveals

time-read
6 dak  |
May 29, 2024
Achilles healed
Country Life UK

Achilles healed

Once used to comfort the lovelorn or soothe the wounds of Greek heroes, yarrow may now have a new starring role in sustainable agriculture

time-read
5 dak  |
May 29, 2024