Celebrating Artemisia Gold: New Technologies in Art Attribution & Conservation
Celebrating Artemisia Gold: New Technologies in Art Attribution & Conservation is a special podcast bringing together leading voices in art history, conservation, and technology to discuss one of the most exciting recent research initiatives undertaken by Artemisia Gold.
Hosted by internationally bestselling author and art historian Dr Noah Charney, the conversation explores the recent diagnostic campaign sponsored by Artemisia Gold on Artemisia Gentileschi’s Mother and Child, part of the collection of the Galleria Spada in Rome.
Joining Dr Charney are Dr Adriana Capriotti, Director of the Galleria Spada, and Beatrice de’ Ruggieri, technical art specialist at Emmebi Diagnostica Artistica, who will discuss the scientific investigations carried out on the painting and the new discoveries emerging from the project.
The discussion also introduces the growing role of artificial intelligence in technical art history, with contributions from Art Recognition, whose pioneering technology is helping transform the field of artwork attribution through AI-assisted analysis.
Together, the panel examines how conservation science, diagnostic imaging, archival research, and emerging technologies are reshaping our understanding of Old Master paintings and opening new possibilities for the authentication and study of historically significant works.
This special event celebrates Artemisia Gold’s ongoing commitment to the rediscovery, research, conservation, and promotion of women artists through collaboration with leading international experts and institutions.
Speakers
Host: Dr Noah Charney
Guests:
- Dr Adriana Capriotti, Director, Galleria Spada, Rome
- Beatrice de’ Ruggieri, Emmebi Diagnostica Artistica
- Art Recognition (AI Art Attribution)
About Dr Noah Charney
Dr Noah Charney is an internationally bestselling author of more than thirty books translated into fourteen languages. His publications include The Collector of Lives: Giorgio Vasari and the Invention of Art, nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in Biography, and Museum of Lost Art, a finalist for the Digital Book World Awards.
A professor of art history specialising in art crime, he has taught at Yale University, Brown University, the Smithsonian Institution, the National Gallery in London, and numerous other leading institutions. He is the founder of ARCA (Association for Research into Crimes against Art) and is widely recognised as one of the world’s foremost authorities on art crime and cultural heritage.
Watch the Podcast
Watch this episode and explore previous conversations in the Artemisia Gold podcast series: