Meanwhile I got it wrong when Dr Spooner (real name, no point obscuring her) posted her pictures from a visit to Roscoff in Brittany. This figure on the church altarpiece looks very much like the blessed saint, but the Dr assures me it's instead identified as Judith: that would, to be fair, make more sense, as in the legend it's Catherine who gets her head cut off, not the wicked Emperor Maxentius, otherwise often seen as a cringing presence at her feet. It has sometimes struck me as odd that in some representations of St Catherine, Maxentius gets reduced to a head: they are all post-reformation, and tend to be Spanish in cultural context, like this intensely dramatic treatment by Antonio Vela Cobo. Now I wonder whether there wasn't some iconographical crossover with Judith, another feminist hero avant la lettre. No wonder Artemisia Gentileschi was fascinated by both of them.
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