Google Doodle pays tribute to Judith Leyster
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Google said its Doodle was meant to commemorate the day in 2009 when the Frans Hals Museum in Haarlem opened a Leyster show that was meant as a corrective.
“One could say painting came easel-y to Judith Leyster, a 17th-century master painter and a central figure in the Dutch Golden Age,” Google said in a statement. “However, misogyny and a forged signature caused art dealers to misattribute her paintings to male artists for decades.”
Google was referring to an 1892 lawsuit that resulted in the revelation that a Leyster painting now belonging to the Louvre had long been billed as a Hals painting. The work’s value was subsequently downgraded before being bought by the Louvre around two decades later, in 1914. According to the Washington Post, there is no record of a Leyster work having been hung in an institution or publicly sold prior to the 1892 lawsuit.
Since then, Leyster has been studied more widely, and during the ’70s, as feminist art historians like Linda Nochlin began to ask provocative questions about the omission of women artists from the canon, Leyster only received more attention.
The 2009 show, which also appeared at the National Gallery of Art, led to a revival of her art. Peter Schjeldahl, writing in the New Yorker, said of the exhibition, “I knew Leyster was good, but the Washington show surprised me with its suggestions of the formation of a great artist. It left me indignant on her behalf.”
Google has used the Doodle to honor the old female artist to commemorate her work.
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