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However, Gentileschi's main influence starting from the early 17th century was Caravaggio, also in Rome at the time, whose style he was one of the best followers of. Sharing with the former the shadowy character, he took part to several adventures in the Rome's streets, and in 1603 he was called as witness in the process against Caravaggio. In 1612 he was again called to the Tribunal of Rome, this time to speak against Tassi, charged of the rape of his daughter Artemisia. After Caravaggio's flee from Rome, Gentileschi developed a more personal Tuscan lyricism, characterized by lighter colors and precision in details reminiscent of his Mannerist beginnings. After a long sojourn in the Marche, in the early 1620s Gentileschi went to Genoa, and then to Paris, at the court of Marie de Medici.
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