Review

How to Be a Renaissance Woman?

Candy Bedworth 15 May 2024 min Read

How To Be A Renaissance Woman: The Untold History of Beauty and Female Creativity is a compelling new book by Jill Burke that offers fascinating insights into the world of 16th-century women’s lives.

Vivid Evocation

Published by Pegasus Books in 2024, this new book by Jill Burke is a must-read! Whether you are an academic, a TikTok influencer, or just generally interested in Renaissance art, this book has it all. Burke magically evokes women’s daily lives in Renaissance Europe, guiding us as we walk the streets of 16th-century Italy.

We get to look over the shoulder of the alchemist apothecary or sit at the kitchen table of a courtesan grinding red sandalwood. You can almost smell the rose water and feel the soothing touch of beeswax. From noblewomen to the lowest peasant, we get up close and personal with beauty and cosmetic practices used across Europe at that time.

how to be a renaissance woman: Vittore Carpaccio, Woman With Red Hair, 1495-1498, Borghese Gallery, Rome, Italy.

Vittore Carpaccio, Woman With Red Hair, 1495-1498, Borghese Gallery, Rome, Italy.

Oppressive or Empowering?

Don’t be deceived – this is not a frivolous story of make-up and superficial aesthetics. Burke uses the lens of beauty culture to give us a fascinating insight into the workings of the Renaissance mind. Sadly, it seems that Renaissance women had all the hang-ups and beauty obsessions modern women face today, and were subjected to the same body-fascism too. The color plates within the book give us a sumptuous overview of Renaissance art and what exactly women were expected to live up to.

Historically speaking, Instagram, selfie culture and so on are just the most recent flashpoints in a long saga.

Jill Burke

How To Be A Renaissance Woman, Pegasus Books 2024

how to be a renaissance woman: Titian, Woman With a Mirror, 1550, Louvre, Paris, France.

Titian, Woman With a Mirror, 1550, Louvre, Paris, France.

Beauty Fears

Renaissance women’s concerns mirror the fears and worries faced by modern women. Are my curls frizzy? Are those stretch marks? Should I get a nose job? Are my boobs too saggy? Are my legs too hairy? Sadly, pale skin and golden hair were even then the “preferred option.”

Burke touches on the inherent racism of the beauty ideal, as well as discussing women and weight, witchcraft, and religion. Cosmetic surgery makes a surprising appearance – nose jobs and labiaplasty are clearly much older than we had thought. Small apple-shaped breasts were very much in vogue. An interesting historical note is the appearance of full-length mirrors in the 16th century. People could now see, very clearly, just how they appeared to the outside world.

Women’s bodies are presented as forever-unfinished projects, to be constantly improved and worked upon.

Jill Burke

How To Be A Renaissance Woman, Pegasus Books 2024

how to be a renaissance woman: Paris Bordone, Venetian Women at their Toilet, 1545, National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.

Paris Bordone, Venetian Women at their Toilet, 1545, National Galleries of Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.

Recipes

This is an incredibly well-researched piece of work. But it’s not a dusty academic tome, it breezes along at a lively pace, and it is packed with detail and personal stories. At times it’s like sitting with a pal, gossiping about your newest skincare routine or expensive perfume. This was the point in history when printing and publishing were becoming more common, so we see the first beauty pamphlets and self-care books being purchased and shared. From these fascinating resources, Burke shares recipes, so you can recreate the creams, emulsions, and waters that were used by Renaissance women. How cool is that? After mixing and concocting in the kitchen, you can sit at your dressing table and play at being a Renaissance-era lady!

how to be a renaissance woman: Lavinia Fontana, Portrait of Isabella Ruini as Venus, 1592, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen, France.

Lavinia Fontana, Portrait of Isabella Ruini as Venus, 1592, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen, France.

Intelligent and Creative

Some of the ingredients may turn our modern stomachs: snails and goat fat anyone? But don’t be fooled into patronizing these women from past times, they were knowledgeable. They had significant knowledge of science, medicine, chemical processes, and herbalism. Although we do know now that lime, mercury, and arsenic are NOT ideal ingredients! Burke’s Renaissance women were creative, carving out space for themselves in a male-dominated culture. Women were central to healthcare in this period, as midwives, nursemaids, and healers, it was inevitable that these skills would also be used for self-care rituals. As Burke says:

In an era when most ailments were treated with household remedies, it was women who investigated and either made or bought this medicine.

Jill Burke

How To Be A Renaissance Woman, Pegasus Books 2024

how to be a renaissance woman: Artemesia Gentileschi, Venus and Cupid, 1626, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA, USA.

Artemesia Gentileschi, Venus and Cupid, 1626, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA, USA.

Rebel or Embrace?

People from every period of history have thought about (and worried about) their appearance. Social media may have amplified this, but it has always been with us. The relationship between women and beauty is complex. Are we pandering to the male gaze? Or are we empowering and celebrating ourselves? Some Renaissance women argued against the prison of beautification, demanding women pursue instead the life of the mind. Others argued that beauty was one of the few useful powers women had access to. Of course, the complicated truth, both in the Renaissance and today, is that beauty culture can reinforce ideas of gender, race, and class. And it can also subvert those very same ideas. Complicated? Yes! Fascinating? Yes! This book is an absorbing and insightful read.

how to be a renaissance woman: Jill Burke, How To Be A Renaissance Woman, Pegasus Books, 2024, front cover.

Jill Burke, How To Be A Renaissance Woman, Pegasus Books, 2024, front cover.

Get your copy of How to Be a Renaissance Woman on the publisher’s website. 

You can hear Jill Burke talking about Renaissance Italy in this YouTube interview.

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