Corinna of Tanagra
Frederic Lord Leighton, P. R. A. (1830-1896)
1893
Oil on canvas
H 146.5 x W 109 cm
Leighton House Museum, London,
Accession no. LH0374
Purchased, 1908
Image credit: The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea Culture Service, Leighton House Museum
Corinna, from the Boetian town of Tanagra, was the "most renowned poetess of ancient Greece , after Sappho" (Mulroy 167). She was reputed to have competed successfully against Pindar, and her wreath here may indicate this victory. As suggested in the Royal Academy's catalogue, "such paintings as this, where women are seen as powerful through thought and personal inspiration, represent a complementary strand to the better-known works in which women ... are represented as somnolent and inactive" (234). [Click on the image to enlarge it, and mouse over the text for links.]