
The chapters are followed by The Woman Artists' Trail, a map and an inventory of works by women artists in Florence, which was later adapted into the separate, pocket-size guidebook, Art by Women in Florence: A Guide through Five Hundred Years.

Invisible Women: Forgotten Artists of Florence focuses on oil paintings, pastels, watercolors, and drawings.
INVISIBLE WOMEN NUDE PROFESSIONAL
Other chapters include work on Sofonisba Anguissola whose admirers included Michelangelo and Anthony van Dyck Lavinia Fontana, the first female painter in Western Europe to reach the same level of professional acclaim as her male contemporaries Artemisia Gentileschi who created large-scale images of heroines and seventeenth-century pastelist Rosalba Carriera known for her Rococo style and flattering portraits of the wealthy. Fortune focuses on six specific buildings in Florence including the Marucelliana Library, the Last Supper Museum of Andrea del Sarto, and the Gallery of Modern Art in the Pitti Palace. Other chapters highlight painters granted the honor of displaying their self-portrait in the Vasari Corridor such as the Venetian Giulia Lama, the first woman known to draw and study the male nude from a live model, and Marietta Robusti, the daughter of Tintoretto who was often called "La Tintoretta." The book covers still-life painters such as Maria Van Oosterwyck and Margherita Caffi best known for her elaborate bouquets with freely hanging wild flowers. It describes the city as a center for women court artists in the Baroque period as exemplified by the teacher-student succession of Giovanna Fratellini, Violante Siries Cerroti, and Anna Bacherini Piattoli. Invisible Women discusses female artistic influence in Florence starting with the first known Florentine nun-artist Suor Plautilla Nelli. The book was the basis of a five-part Emmy award winning television documentary, produced by WFYI Productions, which was first broadcast on PBS in 2012. It has twenty-six chapters on thirty-five women artists active in Florence. Contributing authors include Linda Falcone, Serena Padovani, Rosella Lari and Sheila Barker.

AWA has rediscovered at least 2,000 works by women artists that have been forgotten in museum attics and churches of Florence, and they have restored more than 60 paintings so far. The book describes the history of female artists in Florence and their hundreds of works in the city's museums or storehouses. Invisible Women: Forgotten Artists of Florence is a 2009 book in English and Italian by Jane Fortune through the Advancing Women Artists Foundation (AWA) and published by The Florentine Press.
