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A Lady Reading as Mary Magdalene
Historical Context
The Master of the Female Half-Lengths was an anonymous Flemish painter of the early sixteenth century whose oeuvre consists almost entirely of small half-length panels of women reading, making music, or writing — secular devotional subjects for a bourgeois Flemish market. The reading woman identified as Mary Magdalene belongs to a type the master refined repeatedly: a well-dressed young woman in contemporary dress whose book or scholarly attribute aligns her with the reformed, contemplative Magdalene rather than the penitent sinful one. Such images sat on the borderline between secular portraiture and devotional imagery.
Technical Analysis
The master's signature format — a narrow, intimate half-length panel — frames the figure tightly so that face, hands, and book dominate the picture surface. The woman's costume is rendered with the meticulous fabric detail of a Flemish miniaturist, distinguishing her silk sleeves and embroidered collar with careful tonal gradations.
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