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  1. Magdalena Ventura with Her Husband and Son or The Bearded Lady is a 1631 oil on canvas painting by the Spanish artist Jusepe de Ribera. It is now part of the Fundación Casa Ducal de Medinaceli collection and displayed at the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid.

  2. The Bearded Woman is a unique painting and one of the most curious works in European art of this period. It demonstrates Ribera's skills in taking the unusual and unknown and transforming it into a masterpiece of suggestiveness.

  3. Jun 22, 2023 · This article discussed “The Bearded Woman” painting by Jusepe de Ribera. It explored a contextual analysis around why the artist painted it, who commissioned it, and who the woman in the painting was. It also discussed the formal compositional qualities of the painting.

    • Alicia du Plessis
    • Jusepe de Ribera
    • ( Author And Art History Expert )
    • 1631
  4. Jusepe de Ribera ( Valencian: [josep ðe riˈβeɾa]; 1591 – 1652) was a Spanish painter and printmaker. Ribera, Francisco de Zurbarán, Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, and the singular Diego Velázquez, are regarded as the major artists of Spanish Baroque painting. Referring to a series of Ribera exhibitions held in the late 20th century ...

  5. Jusepe de Ribera. Faces contorted in pain, mutilated bodies, sagging flesh, bearded women and deformed boys: such is the stuff of Jusepe de Ribera's paintings. The fact that Ribera was probably the most influential painter of the Spanish Baroque (even more influential than his far more famous compatriot, Velázquez) tends to be overshadowed by ...

  6. Magdalena Ventura was from the Abruzzi, a region in the kingdom of Naples, and began to grow a beard when she was thirty-seven. Fifteen years later, the woman and her husband, a timid sort wearing an understandably befuddled expression, produced the infant she holds in her arms.

  7. Magdalena Ventura with Her Husband and Son or The Bearded Lady is a 1631 oil on canvas painting by the Spanish artist Jusepe de Ribera. It is now part of the Fundación Casa Ducal de Medinaceli collection and displayed at the Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid.

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