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Exhibitions
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Exhibition
![]() Lovis Corinth German, 1858-1925 Judith and Holofernes, from Das Buch Judith (The Book of Judith), 1910 Lithograph The F.S. Winston Fund, by exchange P.70.59 Beware Her Wiles: Woman as Temptress in the Renaissance TraditionSaturday, August 14, 2010Sunday, December 12, 2010 Certain pairings from the Bible, antiquity, and history came to represent the Power of Women theme in literature and the visual arts, including: Samson, who loved the Philistine woman Delilah so desperately that he told her the secret of his strength, opening himself to attack; Solomon, who was induced by one of his pagan wives to forsake God and worship false idols; David, so helplessly attracted to Bathsheba that he committed adultery with her and had her husband killed; Salome, who danced so prettily for Herod that he granted her request for the head of St. John the Baptist; and Judith, who secured the trust of the Assyrian general Holofernes, the enemy of her people, then cut off his head in the dead of night. |
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