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Orazio Gentileschi
Pisa, Italy, 1563-London, United Kingdom, 1639
1628
Oil on canvas, 226 x 282 cm
Acquired in 1924
In 1626 King Charles I of England invited Gentileschi to London and commissioned several large-scale canvases from him. This work was one of them and relates the biblical passage in which Lot, having learnt of the destruction of Sodom, flew with his family. On the way his wife, depicted in the landscape as a minute figure, was transformed into a statue of salt when she disobeyed divine orders and turned back to look at the city in flames. Lot and his daughters took refuge in a cave where, in the fear of being left alone in the world, the girls intoxicated and seduced their father in order to bear his children. Gentileschi subtly suggests the eroticism of this delicate subject, symbolically brought into play in the context of the dynastic concerns of the English court, although he had depicted the subject previously in Genoa. The vine, the jug and the spilt wine allude to Lot’s inebriation in this open and elaborate composition, in which the three almost life-size figures stand out against the dark ground thanks to a dramatic lighting. The nuances of Lot’s iridescent robe and of the mantle worn by one of his daughters, painted in bright ultramarine, are rendered with great skill. During this London period Gentileschi’s painting evolved towards a refined colourful style, as exemplified by this magnificent work. In 1628 the painting was hung in Whitehall Palace and was subsequently taken to Greenwich Palace on the express wish of Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I. In the early seventeenth century Gentileschi met Caravaggio in Rome and became one of his most distinguished disciples, capturing his style with greater elegance and less tenebrism than other followers. After working in Rome, Genoa and Turin, and subsequently in Paris in the service of Maria de’ Medici, he eventually took up residence in London. [A.S.L.]

We can offer you two different kinds of scholarship programmes: Practices and Research.
Public Announcement 12/13: starts on the 5th of May and finishes on the 21th of May 2011 (both inclusive).
The museum offers 8 training scholarships in different areas with the aim of contributing to the insertion of young people into the workplace, encouraging self-training and bringing young people closer to a professional working context. This Programme is possible thanks to the sponsorship of Manterola, the internationally renowned company dedicated to producing and transporting exhibitions.
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If you feel passionately about research, then the Museum and BBK offer you the opportunity to do what you like doing best. Directed from the Museum Archives, these scholarships aim to encourage and stimulate studies regarding the history of art, the in-depth investigation of a specific piece of work or artist belonging to the Museum's Permanent Collection or about researching Basque artists in general.