Abstract

Midwestern Arcadia A 1639 inventory of the Palazzo Sacchetti in Rome reveals the display of four large paintings in the apartment of the family matriarch: Pietro da Cortona’s The Sacrifice of Polyxena, The Rape of the Sabines, and The Triumph of Bacchus, and a copy after Nicolas Poussin’s The Triumph of Flora. The imagery and placement of these artworks raises crucial and as yet unexplored issues of reception and ideological function. One must consider how a Baroque female viewer, differently from her male counterparts, might have understood these paintings, which I will situate within the tradition of didactic domestic imagery produced in early modern Italy. DOI: 10.18277/makf.2015.10 HEROINES AND TRIUMPHS: VISUAL EXEMPLARS, FAMILY POLITICS, AND GENDER IDEOLOGY IN BAROQUE ROME

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