Saint Catherine's story

Artemisia Gentileschi's 'Self Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria' in the context of a centuries-long fascination with this pious and resilient Christian martyr

Roundel with Saint Catherine of Alexandria (ca. 1500)The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Saint Catherine of Alexandria, a fourth-century Christian martyr from northern Africa, was a figure of great fascination for European artists from the Middle Ages onwards.

Catherine's attributes include a crown, royal robes, an open prayer book and a sword.

Her story was popularised through retellings of saints' lives in books like The Golden Legend.

It was through these stories and countless depictions that Saint Catherine's 'attributes' became standardised: these are the features and objects by which saints can be recognised.

And perhaps most common of all her attributes is the spiked 'Catherine' wheel.

This pane of stained glass also includes the ruler over whom she triumphed – the emperor Maxentius – crushed beneath her feet.

St. Catherine denies idolatry & The beheading of St. Catherine by Master of the Munich crucifixion altar of 1517 (Pierre des Mares?)Gemäldegalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Here Saint Catherine's story is told in a series of individual episodes spread over two panels. 

According to legend, Catherine was a princess who showed great intellectual prowess from childhood. As a young woman she had a vision of the Virgin and Child, and converted to Christianity.  

In this scene she stands in robes decorated with ermine, a fur commonly reserved for royalty, with a crown upon her head. 

On the throne is the artist's impression of the Emperor Maxentius, who fell in love with Catherine and intended to take her for his wife. He demanded that she renounce her new faith and ordered 50 philosophers to persuade Catherine to change her mind.

In this scene the philosophers argue with Catherine.

But instead of winning her over, Catherine converted them to Christianity whereupon Maxentius had the philosophers burned alive.

Maxentius was so enraged he had an instrument of torture built – revolving wheels with iron spikes – to which Catherine was bound.

Before the wheels could harm her, a thunderbolt from heaven destroyed them.

Catherine was later beheaded. This is why the executioner's sword is one of her attributes, along with the wheel.

In a final detail, Saint Catherine's body is shown being carried by angels to the monastery on Mount Sinai, which still claims to possess her relics.

The Virgin and Child with Saints and Donor (probably 1510) by Gerard DavidThe National Gallery, London

Another important episode in Catherine's story is depicted here by Gerard David, a 15th-century artist working in Bruges.  

It shows Saint Catherine, dressed in splendid robes, kneeling beside the Virgin Mary, receiving a ring from the Christ Child.

This references the vision Saint Catherine had at her conversion to Christianity. In the vision she underwent a 'mystic marriage' with Christ. 

Catherine's devotion to this marriage and her faith gave her the strength to withstand the trials she was put through.

She was therefore held up as a great example to Christians – and most specifically Christian women – everywhere.

Saint Catherine of Alexandria (about 1507) by RaphaelThe National Gallery, London

Saint Catherine's popularity as a figure of veneration meant she frequently featured in altarpieces and devotional works of art.

As artistic interests and methods changed over time, so did her image.

In this 16th-century panel by Raphael, he dispenses with the trappings of royalty to focus on the visionary aspect of Catherine's faith. 

With her hand brought gracefully to her breast and her lips parted, she looks towards heaven.

Saint Catherine’s beautiful curving contrapposto pose (with her shoulders moving one way and her hips another) recalls a classical statue of Venus as well as works by Raphael's contemporaries (and rivals) Michelangelo and Leonardo. 

Saint Catherine of Alexandria (Around 1598) by CaravaggioMuseo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza

At the very end of the 16th century, when Artemisia Gentileschi was just a young girl, Caravaggio painted this arresting image of Saint Catherine.

He sets her against a plain, dark background and shows her kneeling on a cushion.

Leaning against the broken wheel – so much larger and more physically threatening than in Raphael's idealised depiction – Caravaggio's young saint clasps the executioner's sword to her chest.

Using dramatic lighting, Caravaggio picks out highlights on the saint's eyes and glints of light on the sharp spikes of the wheel.

Her gaze is wary yet intelligent.

Self Portrait as Saint Catherine of Alexandria (about 1615-17) by Artemisia GentileschiThe National Gallery, London

Artemisia brings her Saint Catherine much closer to the viewer than Caravaggio. 

The tight crop of the image intensifies her physical presence.

Artemisia brings the saint's hand close to the sharp spikes of the broken wheel to underscore the violence of the torture Catherine endured.

But both her hands – one on the wheel and the other delicately holding the palm – suggest poise and resolve.  

Artemisia gives her Catherine a crown but, unlike Raphael, she has her saint directly hold the viewers' gaze.

Catherine's facial features are Artemisia's own. 

Simultaneously an image of Saint Catherine of Alexandria and a self portrait, Artemisia brought something new to the centuries-old tradition of depicting the young and steadfast martyr. 

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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