https://www.google.com/doodles/international-womens-day-2020
International Women’s Day 2019
International Women’s Day 2018
International Women’s Day 2017
International Women’s Day 2016
International Women’s Day 2015
c.1780 / Oil on canvas / 25”x21” / Royal Academy of Arts, London
From 2018~ Two of the Founding Members of the Royal Academy Were Women. Who Were They?
https://frieze.com/article/two-founding-members-royal-academy-were-women-who-were-they
See also: March 8~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/08/march-8-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
1672 / Oil on canvas / 62 2/5”x44 1/2” / Collection Parish of Cascais, Portugal
See also: March 7~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/07/march-7-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
c.1640 / Oil on canvas / 47 1/4”x40 1/5” / Private collection
“The Criminally Overlooked Talent of Baroque Painter Michaelina Wautier”~
https://hyperallergic.com/455577/the-criminally-overlooked-talent-of-baroque-painter-michaelina-wautier/
Review of “Michaelina Wautier, 1604-1689: Glorifying a Forgotten Talent”~
https://oudholland.rkd.nl/index.php/reviews/19-review-of-glorifying-a-forgotten-talent-2018
See also: March 6~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/06/march-6-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
c.1588? / Engraving / 13 1/4”x10 5/8” / Various collections, incl. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
Diana Scultori was born in Mantua, Italy and is one of the earliest known women printmakers.
https://www.nationalgalleries.org/art-and-artists/artists/diana-scultori
See also: March 5~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/05/march-5-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
c.1520 / Marble / 21 1/2”x23 1/4” / Museum of San Petronio, Bologna, ItalyThe Only Woman in the Renaissance’s Most Famous Record of Art History~
https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-woman-renaissances-famous-record-art-history
Excerpts from Giorgio Vasari’s “Life of Madonna Properzia de’ Rossi,” sculptor of Bologna~
http://www.italianrenaissanceresources.com/units/unit-3/sub-page-03/excerpts-from-giorgio-vasaris-life-of-madonna-properzia-de-rossi-sculptor-of-bologna/
See also: March 4~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/04/march-4-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
c.975 / Illuminated manuscript / 15 3/4”x10 1/4” / Girona Cathedral, Catalonia, Spain
Ende was a nun who worked as an artist on a collection of manuscripts at a Spanish monastery in the tenth century. The texts are copies of commentaries on the Apocalypse which were compiled in 786 by a monk named Beatus of Liebana. Ende signed her work with the Latin words pintrix et D[e]i aiutrix, “paintress and helper of god.”
https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/heritage_floor/endeThe Girona Beatus is a 10th century illustrated manuscript of the Commentary on the Apocalypse by a Spanish monk, Saint Beatus of Liébana. A theologian and geographer, Beatus’ commentary explained the Apocalypse as depicted in the Book of Revelations and its importance to the state of the Catholic church.
https://exhibits.library.ucsc.edu/exhibits/show/havc-winter2015/religious-books/the-apocalypse–then-and-now
See also: March 3~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/03/march-3-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
Iaia of Cyzius was a Roman painter and ivory carver active around 100 BC. None of her work is known to have survived.
Like Timarete, Pliny the Elder mentioned Iaia in his Natural History during his discussion of women artists…
“Cyzicus, who never married, painted pictures with the brush at Rome (and also drew with the cestrum or graver on ivory), chiefly portraits of women, as well as a large picture on wood of an Old Woman at Neapolis, and also a portrait of herself, done with a looking- glass. No one else had a quicker hand in painting, while her artistic skill was such that in the prices she obtained she far outdid the most celebrated portrait painters of the same period, Sopolis and Dionysius, whose pictures fill the galleries.”
http://www.attalus.org/info/pliny_hn.html
Iaia is also one of the three women artists mentioned in Giovanni Boccaccio’s De Mulieribus Claris, although he renames her Marcia Varronis. As with Timarete, there are a number of illuminations picturing her as a medieval artist.
See also: March 2~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/02/march-2-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/

Clicking this image will take you to the The Bibliothèque Nationale web site where you can see a larger version.
Timarete was an ancient Greek painter who lived during the fifth century B.C. She has also been referred to as Thamyris, Tamaris, and Thamar. Almost nothing is known about her.
Pliny the Elder briefly mentions Timarete in his Natural History (77 A.D.) during his discussion of women artists…
“There have also been women artists – Timarete the daughter of Micon who painted the extremely archaic panel picture of Artemis at Ephesus…”
http://www.attalus.org/info/pliny_hn.html
Timarete is one of three women artists mentioned in De Mulieribus Claris (1361–62), a collection of biographies of historical and mythological women by the Florentine author Giovanni Boccaccio, although he calls her Thamar.
“De Mulieribus Claris” was widely distributed in illuminated manuscripts and then as printed books. As a result there are a number of illuminations picturing Timarete as a medieval artist.
See also: March 1~ Women’s History Month in visual arts
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/03/01/march-1-womens-history-month-in-visual-arts/
Date? / Woodcut on rice paper / 12”x9” / Various, private collections
See also: February 27~ African-American visual artists
https://schristywolfe.com/2018/02/27/february-27-african-american-visual-artists/