Eleni Boukoura-Altamoura Explained

Eleni Boukoura-Altamoura
Birth Name:Eleni Boukoura
Birth Date:1821
Birth Place:Spetses, Greece
Death Date:1900
Death Place:Spetses, Greece
Style:Portraitist
Movement:Neoclassicism, Romanticism
Spouse:Francesco Saverio Altamura

Eleni Boukoura-Altamoura (Greek: Ελένη Μπούκουρα-Αλταμούρα; 1821–1900), also known as Eleni Boukouras or Helen Boukoura, was an Arvanite painter. She is noted as being the first great female painter of Greece.[1] [2]

Biography

Eleni was an Arvanite.[3] She was born on the island of Spetses in 1821. Her surname Boukouras comes from the Albanian word Bukur meaning beautiful. She was the daughter of Yannis Boukouras, a wealthy aristocrat and entertainer who had opened one of the first theaters in Athens following the Greek War of Independence. Eleni developed an interest in art from a young age. Seeing this, her father hired Italian artist Raffaello Ceccoli as a tutor for his daughter. She continued her studies, and at the age of 27 left for Naples with a letter of recommendation from Ceccoli to begin her education as an artist. While studying in Naples and Florence, she dressed as a man in order to attend art classes.[1] [4] [5]

While studying in Italy, Eleni began a relationship with Italian painter Francesco Saverio Altamura, with whom she had three children. She later converted to Catholicism and married Altamura to legitimize the relationship, though her husband would eventually leave Eleni for his mistress, British painter Jane Benham Hay. Eleni and two of her children (her youngest son, Alexander, remained in the custody of her estranged husband) relocated to Athens, where Eleni made a living through painting and teaching art lessons. In 1872 she and her daughter Sophia moved to her family home on Spetses when Sophia contracted tuberculosis. Sophia died of the disease before the end of the year at the age of 18, and so Eleni returned to Athens. In 1876 her son Ioannis, himself a noted seascape painter, finished his studies in Copenhagen and returned to live with his mother in Athens. Just as with his sister before him, Ioannis contracted tuberculosis, succumbing to the disease in 1878. After his death, she burned some of her son's paintings along with many of her own works, and retreated from society. At some point she returned to Spetses, where she died in relative obscurity in 1900.[6]

Legacy

Eleni Boukoura is considered one of first great female artists of Modern Greece. The tragedies she experienced in her life were the subject of Greek author Rhea Galanaki's novel Eleni, or, Nobody, which was later adapted into a play.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Istoria. istoria.gr. 2018-10-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20080603042220/http://istoria.gr/aug02/3.htm. 2008-06-03. dead.
  2. Web site: Eleni Boukoura-Altamoura: The first Greek female painter [Eleni Boukoura-Altamoura: I proti Ellinida zografos]]. Eventful. en. 2018-10-05.
  3. Loïc Marcou. La " crise grecque " dans l'Ultime Humiliation de Rhéa Galanaki. Journals OpenEdition. 2016. 44. 10.4000/ceb.9850. french. free.
  4. Web site: Grèce Hebdo - Peintres grecs: Eleni Boukoura-Altamura. www.grecehebdo.gr. fr-fr. 2018-10-05.
  5. Web site: Eleni Bukura Altamura, dressing as a man to paint – Gentlewomen. gentlewomen.al. sq-AL. 2018-10-05. 2020-10-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20201023060821/http://gentlewomen.al/2016/08/08/eleni-bukura-altamura-dressing-as-a-man-to-paint/. dead.
  6. Web site: CERL Thesaurus. data.cerl.org. en. 2018-10-05.
  7. Bien, P. (2004). World Literature Today, 78(3/4), 150-150. doi:10.2307/40158640