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Museum of Fine Arts, Boston | Italy’s First Woman of Letters: Vittoria Colonna @mfaboston | Uploaded 9 months ago | Updated 2 hours ago
Explore the life and writing of Vittoria Colonna, Marchesa di Pescara, the first woman in Italy to have a book of her own poems published. What did it mean for a woman to be a writer in 16th-century Italy? How did Colonna conceive of her role as a love poet and, later, as a devotional poet? How did her close friendship with Michelangelo shape her creative work? Discover the answers to these and other questions about one of Renaissance Italy’s most fascinating figures.

From the course: Women in Renaissance Italy

Ramie Targoff, Jehuda Reinharz Professor of the Humanities, Brandeis University

Wednesday, October 11, 2023
Italy’s First Woman of Letters: Vittoria ColonnaKorean Americans Connect to “Hallyu!”Fashioned by Sargent: Inspired Beauty through DressStories Artists Tell: Introduction and Southwest SpotlightStudio Visit with Jas KnightGuanyin, Bodhisattva of CompassionMuseum of Fine Arts, Boston Live StreamMFA Community Celebration: Diwali“Sonic Blossom” by Lee Mingwei, March 11-April 9, 2015Studio Art Tutorials at Home: Overlaying StencilsDisruption by Design: A New Path to LiberationMFA Community Celebration: Hanukkah

Italy’s First Woman of Letters: Vittoria Colonna @mfaboston

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