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National Gallery - Madonnas and Goddesses
National Gallery introduces students to some of the paintings in the National Gallery collection, developing visual literacy in general.
Most of the pictures of women at the Gallery were painted by men. Only eight female artists are represented, compared with about 400 male artists. Many of the paintings of women were commissioned by men, for men to look at. This programme looks at whether if these factors affect the appearance of the paintings.
Certain types of women appear again and again in the art of the past. Perhaps the woman most frequently portrayed in the paintings of the National Gallery is the Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus. Over about five centuries, in Western Europe, the Catholic Church commissioned huge numbers of religious paintings for churches and many more were made for people to hang in their homes.
- Duration: 05:00 minutes
- Published: 28 April 2006
- Licence information for National Gallery - Madonnas and Goddesses
- Download: We have detected that you are accessing this website from outside the United Kingdom. Unfortunately, rights have not been granted for international streaming and downloading of this programme.
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