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Judith
Judith
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Judith

by After Cristofano Allori

Date: 17th Century

Currently on display

in Room 2

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Item details
  • Acquisition

    Bourgeois Bequest, 1811

  • Accession number

    DPG267

  • Artist

    After Cristofano Allori

  • Date

    17th Century

  • Dimensions

    30.5 x 24.2 cm

  • Materials

    Oil on copper

  • Notes

    Adopted by Nicole Ryder, 1992

The Jewish heroine Judith holds the head of the enemy Assyrian commander, Holofernes, whom she decapitated in his drunken sleep. This story is taken from the Book of Judith, an apocryphal text that is not included within the canon of the Hebrew or Christian Biblical tradition. Dressed in a decorative yellow gown with a red and blue cape draped over her shoulder, Judith’s beauty almost distracts the viewer from the darker aspects of this painting: that in one hand, she holds a sword, and in the other, the head of Holofernes. Judith is accompanied by her maid, who assisted in the beheading.  

The story of Judith and Holofernes was a popular subject during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This is one of numerous copies after Cristofano Allori's (1577-1621) celebrated original, in which the head of Holofernes is reputedly a self-portrait and the figure of Judith a portrait of Maria de Giovanni Mazzafirri, known as 'La Mazzafirra', who was the artist’s model and former mistress. 

Judith

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