Susanna And The Elders In Art
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Susanna and the Elders Susanna (; : "lily"), also called Susanna and the Elders, is a narrative included in the Book of Daniel (as chapter 13) by the Catholic Church, Oriental Orthodox Churches and Eastern Orthodox Churches. It is one of the additions to Daniel, plac ...
is an
Old Testament The Old Testament (often abbreviated OT) is the first division of the Christian biblical canon, which is based primarily upon the 24 books of the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh, a collection of ancient religious Hebrew writings by the Israelites. The ...
story of a woman falsely accused of adultery after two men who, after discovering one another in the act of spying on her while she bathes, conspire to blackmail her for sex. Depictions of the story date back to the 9th century, but were infrequent until the Renaissance. The story has been portrayed by many artists; modern scholars explain this by pointing out the appeal to male artists and patrons of a portrayal of a naked woman watched by sexually aroused fully-clothed men. The portrayals by
Artemisia Gentileschi Artemisia Lomi or Artemisia Gentileschi (, ; 8 July 1593) was an Italian Baroque painter. Gentileschi is considered among the most accomplished seventeenth-century artists, initially working in the style of Caravaggio. She was producing profess ...
were among the earliest to depart from the traditional portrayals of Susanna as not being distressed during the encounter. The story is portrayed on the Susanna Crystal, an engraved rock crystal piece made in the Lotharingia region of northwest Europe in the mid 9th century, now in the British Museum.


Story

In part of the Book of Daniel, Susanna, a young and beautiful married woman, is lusted after by two well-respected men. One day they catch one another spying on her as she bathes. Together they hatch a plot to blackmail her into having sex with them by telling her they will testify they caught her committing adultery, which is punishable by death, if she does not comply. She refuses, and when they accuse her in front of the community, testifying that they saw her having sex with a young man under a tree in her husband's garden, she casts her eyes to heaven in a plea for help.
Daniel Daniel is a masculine given name and a surname of Hebrew origin. It means "God is my judge"Hanks, Hardcastle and Hodges, ''Oxford Dictionary of First Names'', Oxford University Press, 2nd edition, , p. 68. (cf. Gabriel—"God is my strength" ...
cross-examines the two men separately, asking them what kind of tree the adulterers were having sex under. The first man says a mastic, the second an oak, and the two men are caught in their lies and stoned to death themselves.


History of portrayals

The story was portrayed as early as the 9th century. It was frequently painted from about 1470. Susanna is the subject of paintings by many artists, including artists who depicted the scene multiple times. The story has been portrayed especially often from the 1500s, when nudes came back into fashion. In practice it allowed artists the opportunity to display their skill in the depiction of the female nude, often for the pleasure of their male patrons. According to Mary Garrard, the scene has been unusually attractive to male artists and male art patrons as "an opportunity for legitimized voyeurism", an appeal heightened by the fact the naked woman in the story was being watched by lechers, allowing both the artist and the viewer of the painting a point of view character in the scene. Garrard points out that it is significant that portrayals of The Judgement of Daniel and The Stoning of the Elders, the other two major vignettes from this story, are comparatively rare in art. Instead of focussing on truth discovered or justice meted out, nearly all portrayals focus on the naked or partially-naked woman being watched or importuned by sexually aroused fully-clothed men. Garard argues that the possession of a woman who has clearly said "no" is in fact rape, and that the depictions of Susanna and the Elders as being from the point of view of the elders are depictions from the point of view of attempted rapists. Susanna's dilemma is most often painted as not her desire to avoid being victimized but instead whether or not to give in to her presumed natural desire to have sex with two elderly blackmailers.


Depictions

The Susanna Crystal, also known as the Lothair Crystal, a 9th-century engraved rock crystal in a gilded copper frame made in the Lotharingia region of northwest Europe in the mid-9th century and which is now in the British Museum, depicts in several vignettes the story of Susanna from the Old Testament book of Daniel. Inscriptions from the Vulgate accompany each vignette. The vignettes are rendered in the Rheims figural style. Portrayals in paintings through the end of the 18th century, with few departures, tend to portray Susanna as making little protest and sometimes seeming to appear acquiescent. During the Renaissance period there was an increased interest in and production of nudes, which had fallen out of interest during the Middle Ages. Production of paintings featuring naked women increased. Typical representations show Susanna protesting being watched mildly or not at all. Portrayals of the scene during this period typically emphasized the elders' point of view—the voyeurism they enjoyed, their anticipation of sex—and did not address Susanna's distress except to occasionally picture her with her eyes cast to heaven in a plea for help.
Norma Broude Norma Broude (born 1 May 1941) is an American art historian and scholar of feminism and 19th-century French and Italian painting. She is also a Professor Emerita of art history from American University. Broude, with Mary Garrard, is an early le ...
called these and the similar depictions in Renaissance art blatant distortions of the biblical Susanna. File:Borgia Apartment 004 (cropped).jpg, 1492–1494 Pinturicchio File:Master of Apollo and Daphne - Susanna and the Elders in the Garden, and the Trial of Susanna before the Elders - 1933.1029 - Art Institute of Chicago (cropped).jpg, c.1500 Master of Apollo and Daphne File:Lotto, susanna e i vecchioni.jpg, 1517 Lorenzo Lotto File:3298-vis Print 15070kopie.jpg, c.1540–1560
Jan Matsys Jan Massijs or Jan Matsys (c.1510 – 8 October 1575) was a Flemish Renaissance painter known for his history paintings, genre scenes and landscapes. He also gained a reputation as a painter of the female nude, which he painted with a sensua ...
File:Jacopo Tintoretto - Susanna and the Elders - WGA22656.jpg, 1555 Tintoretto File:Alessandro Allori - Susanna and The Elders - WGA00186.jpg, 1561 Alessandro Allori File:Annibale Carracci Susanna.jpg, 1590
Annibale Carracci Annibale Carracci (; November 3, 1560 – July 15, 1609) was an Italian painter and instructor, active in Bologna and later in Rome. Along with his brother and cousin, Annibale was one of the progenitors, if not founders of a leading strand of th ...
File:Susanna and the Elders Ludovico Carracci 1598.jpg, 1598 Ludovico Carracci File:Cornelis van Haarlem - Susanna and the Elders.jpg, 1599
Cornelis van Haarlem Cornelis Corneliszoon van Haarlem (1562 – 11 November 1638) was a Dutch Golden Age painter and draughtsman, one of the leading Northern Mannerist artists in the Netherlands, and an important forerunner of Frans Hals as a portraitist. Biograph ...
Treatments in the Baroque period were more likely to emphasize the point of view of Susanna, who is uncomfortable with or objects to being watched, while others continued to concentrate on the male gaze. In 17th-century portrayals, combining Susanna's rejection of the men's advances while gazing toward heaven became common, although in the biblical passage, she does not cast her eyes to heaven until after they have publicly accused her of adultery. File:Painting of Susanna and the Elders by Rubens.jpg, 1607
Rubens Sir Peter Paul Rubens (; ; 28 June 1577 – 30 May 1640) was a Flemish artist and diplomat from the Duchy of Brabant in the Southern Netherlands (modern-day Belgium). He is considered the most influential artist of the Flemish Baroque traditio ...
File:1643 Stanzione Susanna und die beiden Alten anagoria.JPG, 1643 by
Massimo Stanzione Massimo Stanzione (also called Stanzioni; 1585 – 1656) was an Italian Baroque painter, mainly active in Naples, where he and his rival Jusepe de Ribera dominated the painting scene for several decades. He was primarily a painter of altarpiec ...
File:Susanna and the Elders.jpg, 1649 Artemisia Gentileschi File:Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari - Susannah and the Elders - Walters 371880.jpg, c.1700–1727 by
Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari Giuseppe Bartolomeo Chiari (10 March 1654 – 8 September 1727), also known simply as ''Giuseppe Chiari'', was an Italian painter of the late-Baroque period, active mostly in Rome. Biography Born in Rome, he was one of the main assistants, alon ...
File:Guercino Susanna and The Elders Parma.jpg, 1650 Guercino
Modern representations depict Susanna as either alone, unaware of being watched, or uncomfortable with it. By the mid 19th century, portrayals often did not include the elders, and the only spectator was the viewer of the painting. File:Suzanna en de ouderlingen Rijksmuseum SK-A-1042.jpeg, 1810 Pierre Van Hanselaere File:Петро В.Басін - Сусанна, застигнутая старцами в купальне (1822г).jpg, 1822 Pyotr Basin File:Francesco Hayez - Susanna at her Bath (National Gallery, London).jpg, 1850 Francesco Hayez File:Schnorr von Carolsfeld Bibel in Bildern 1860 158.png, 1860
Julius Schnorr von Karolsfeld Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld (26 March 1794 – 24 May 1872) () was a German painter, chiefly of Biblical subjects. As a young man he associated with the painters of the Nazarene movement who revived the florid Renaissance style in religious a ...
File:La Casta Susana- Juan Manuel Blanes.jpg, 1862 Juan Manuel Blanes File:Susanna. Skitse.jpg, Susanna. Skitse, 1878 Laurits Tuxen File:Max Fuhrmann - Susanna und die Alten.jpg, c.1908


Artists creating multiple images

Susanna and the Elders, like many scenes featuring naked women and clothed men, was a popular subject, and many artists created multiple paintings during their careers.


Tintoretto 1550–1580s

File:Jacopo Robusti dit Le Tintoret - Suzanne au Bain - Louvre 568.jpg, alt=Nude woman, watched by two men, looks at the viewer of the painting, c. 1550–1560 File:Susana y los viejos, por Tintoretto.jpg, c.1552–1555 File:Jacopo Tintoretto - Susanna and the Elders - WGA22656.jpg, alt=Nude woman being watched by several men as she looks at herself in the mirror, c. 1555 File:Domenico Tintoretto, Susanna, c. 1580s, NGA 372.jpg, c.1580s


Rubens 1607–?

Rubens Sir Peter Paul Rubens (; ; 28 June 1577 – 30 May 1640) was a Flemish artist and diplomat from the Duchy of Brabant in the Southern Netherlands (modern-day Belgium). He is considered the most influential artist of the Flemish Baroque traditio ...
in his late 1630s portrayal places Susanna under an apple tree rather than a mastic or oak, a nod to Eve, the garden of Eden, and resisting, according to Mark Leach, "supreme temptation"; according to Garrard, the implication by both Leach and Rubens is that Susanna had to be very strong-willed indeed to resist the overwhelming attraction of being coerced into sex by two elderly lechers. In 1886 Max Rooses called the Rubens depictions a "gallant enterprise mounted by two bold adventurers", which Garard called an example of a "remarkable testament to the indomitable male ego." File:Painting of Susanna and the Elders by Rubens.jpg, 1607 File:Peter Paul Rubens - Susanna and the Elders - WGA20267.jpg, c.1609–1610 File:Peter Paul Rubens - Susanna and the Elders - WGA20417.jpg, 1611 File:Rubens - Susanna im Bade DSC6880.jpg, 1614 File:Peter Paul Rubens - Susanna and the Elders - Alte Pinakothek 2.jpg, c. 1636–1639 File:Susanna and the Elders - Nationalmuseum - 17599.tif, (unknown date)


Artemisia Gentileschi 1610–1652

Artemisia Gentileschi Artemisia Lomi or Artemisia Gentileschi (, ; 8 July 1593) was an Italian Baroque painter. Gentileschi is considered among the most accomplished seventeenth-century artists, initially working in the style of Caravaggio. She was producing profess ...
produced her first portrayal in 1610 when she was seventeen years old. The painting is considered one of the earliest to portray Susanna as clearly distressed at being watched; according to Christiansen and Mann, "no other artist had interpreted the psychological dimension" of the story. According to Mary Garrard, the painting used an explicitly feminine point of view and provided an "unorthodox interpretation" of the scene, calling out Garrard's surprise that until she did so in 1982, no attention had been paid by art scholars to that unorthodoxy. Garrard notes the similarity in composition to that of the 1590 Annibale Carracci but points out the vastly different feeling; Carracci's Susanna appears to be "sexually available and responsive" while Gentileschi's is clearly distressed. Carracci's lushly planted garden is replaced by a stark stone bench and balustrade. The painting communicates Susanna's unhappiness rather than focussing on the sexual pleasure the elders are coercing her for. It is unique in that the two elders are shown whispering to one another, emphasizing the plot between them. Garrard wrote that "in no other version of the subject known to me are the Elders shown whispering to one another". In early 1611, Gentileschi was raped by Agostino Tassi, whom her father, Orazio Gentileschi, had hired to teach Artemisia, and a second man, Cosimo Quorli. In Tassi's ensuing trial, Artemisia was subjected to thumbscrew, Tassi was convicted but his conviction later overturned, and Gentileschi's reputation was ruined. During the trial she testified that Tassi and Quorli pressured her for sex, accusing her of already having had sex with a servant, a further similarity to Susanna's story. Garrard has speculated that Gentileschi may have already been receiving unwanted attention from Tassi during the period she painted the 1610 portrayal. She points out that the painting is not about rape but about the threat of rape. According to Christiansen and Mann, Gianni Papi identified the elders as having been modeled after Tassi and Orazio. Garrard points out that the Elder on the left in her painting is a "thick-haired younger man", which was "highly unusual in Susanna pictures"; Tassi was in his thirties at the time of the rape. Gina Siciliano points out that the elders "bore the dark curls of Agostino Tassi and the balding sleaziness of Cosimo Quorli." In 1612 Gentileschi completed ''Judith Slaying Holofernes'' which some scholars and commenters have interpreted as visual revenge.Mary Garrard, ''Artemisia Gentileschi'' (1989), qtd. in The attribution of the painting and its date have both been challenged, but Garrard's 1982 attribution and dating have since been accepted by most scholars. Some believe Orazio must have at least provided guidance. Gentileschi eventually produced at least three more paintings depicting the incident, typically also showing Susanna as clearly distressed, along with one other possibility which has since been lost and may be the work of Gianfranco Loredan. Her second painting, which does not conform to the dramatic style of her other depictions of Susanna, was in the eighteenth century attributed to Gentileschi, in the nineteenth century to
Caravaggio Michelangelo Merisi (Michele Angelo Merigi or Amerighi) da Caravaggio, known as simply Caravaggio (, , ; 29 September 1571 – 18 July 1610), was an Italian painter active in Rome for most of his artistic life. During the final four years of hi ...
, but in 1968 reattributed to Gentileschi, although Garrard has questioned this as recently as 2001 due to the unusual format of the signature and because Susana's expression is "sharply out of character for the artist". Christiansen and Mann argue that this may simply be evidence of Gentileschi's adaptability. Susana in this portrayal is as described in Apocrypha, which says that "through her tears she looked up toward Heaven"; Christiansen and Mann speculate that the differences in the depiction may have been at the direction of a patron. Gentileschi's 1649 painting combines two moments in the story, which was common in 17th century portrayals: Susanna's rejection of the men's advances as in the 1610 painting, and the casting of her eyes to heaven as in the 1622. Christiansen and Mann wrote that Gentileschi took "a far more traditional interpretation" of the story than her similarly composed but very different in style and feel 1610 painting. File:Artemisia Gentileschi - Susanna and the Elders - WGA08572.jpg, alt=Young woman in the nude, turning her head away and pushing away two men, 1610 File:Susanna and the Elders.jpg, 1649 File:Artemisia Gentileschi - Susanna and the Elders near a Balcony.jpg, 1652


Rembrandt 1636–1647

Garrard calls Rembrandt's 1647 portrayal one of the more sympathetic to Susanna, portraying her as very young and innocent, but she points out the resemblance to the
Venus de Medici The Venus de' Medici or Medici Venus is a tall Hellenistic marble sculpture depicting the Greek goddess of love Aphrodite. It is a 1st-century BC marble copy, perhaps made in Athens, of a bronze original Greek sculpture, following the type of t ...
, a work considered very sexual in nature because the figure, in attempting to conceal herself, draws attention to herself. File:Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn 151.jpg, 1636 File:Rembrandt - Susanna and the Elders (detail) - WGA19105.jpg, 1647


Franz Stuck 1904–1913

File:Stuck Susanna 2.jpg, 1904 File:Stuck Susanna.jpg, 1913 File:Franz von Stuck Susanna I.jpg, c.1913 File:Franz von Stuck Susanna im Bade c1913.jpg, 1913


Male gaze

In the production of art, the conventions of artistic representation connect the objectification of a woman, by the male gaze, to the
Lacan Jacques Marie Émile Lacan (, , ; 13 April 1901 – 9 September 1981) was a French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist. Described as "the most controversial psycho-analyst since Freud", Lacan gave yearly seminars in Paris from 1953 to 1981, and pu ...
ian theory of
social alienation Social alienation is a person's feeling of disconnection from a group whether friends, family, or wider society to which the individual has an affinity. Such alienation has been described as "a condition in social relationships reflected by (1) ...
— the psychological splitting that occurs from seeing one's self as one is, and seeing one's self as an idealized
representation Representation may refer to: Law and politics *Representation (politics), political activities undertaken by elected representatives, as well as other theories ** Representative democracy, type of democracy in which elected officials represent a ...
. In Italian Renaissance painting, especially in the nude-woman genre, that perceptual split arises from being both the viewer and the viewed, and from seeing one's self through the gaze of other people. Susanna and the Elders, like many biblical or mythological stories of women who for whatever reason were at some point naked, was a frequent subject of paintings of nudes. In the television series and book '' Ways of Seeing'' (1972), the art critic John Berger used portrayals of the scene to address male gaze and the sexual objectification of women in the arts and advertising by emphasizing that men ''look'' and women are ''looked-at'' as the subjects of images. For the purposes of art-as-spectacle, men act and women are acted-upon according to the social conditions of spectatorship, which are determined by the artistic and aesthetic conventions of objectification, which artists have not transcended. In the genre of the Renaissance nude, the woman who is the subject of the painting often is aware of being looked at, either by others in the painting or by the spectator who is gazing at the painting in which she is the subject. Berger analyzes two of Tintoretto's paintings of Susanna. In the first, Susanna "looks back at us looking at her". In the second she is looking at herself in a mirror and thus joining the artist, the viewer, and the elders as a spectator of herself. Susanna's lack of distress and even nonchalance at being observed naked in both paintings and others as depicted by male artists has been contrasted to the clear distress shown in the depiction of the same scene by Artemisia Gentileschi, a female artist, whose Susanna shows she is clearly in distress at being watched by the two men.


References

{{Reflist Sexual harassment Biblical art Iconography Christian iconography Book of Daniel Art depicting Old Testament people *