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Forgotten painting by woman master of Italian Renaissance rediscovered at French museum

Lavinia Fontana, a leading woman painter of the Italian Renaissance, now credited with work a museum in Douai, France, believed was Flemish

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Portrait of a Gentleman, his Daughter and a Servant at the Musee de la Chartreuse in Douai, France. Long thought to have been the work of a Flemish male painter, it has now been attributed to one of the leading woman painters of the Italian Renaissance. Photo: AFP

A provincial museum in northern France has unveiled a picture now attributed to one of the greatest women painters of the Italian Renaissance, Lavinia Fontana, but which had languished for decades in its storage.

The picture – Portrait of a Gentleman, his Daughter and a Servant – will now be a centrepiece of the collection of the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai in northern France.

Lavinia Fontana, who lived from 1552-1614, is seen as one of the very first women to make a career out of painting in Western art, and an outstanding representative of the Italian Renaissance style in her own right.

The picture shows three figures from a well-to-do family, shown dressed in the fashion of the time which is painted in intricate detail.

Fontana’s painting will now be a centrepiece of the collection of the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai. Photo: AFP
Fontana’s painting will now be a centrepiece of the collection of the Musée de la Chartreuse in Douai. Photo: AFP

It shows a father, dressed in black and wearing a voluminous pleated collar, sitting in an armchair, while his daughter, wearing a similar collar, hands him some flowers.

In the background, a maid places a basket of fruit beside them.

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