25 September 2014 – 11
January 2015
This exhibition will examine the portrayal of witches and
witchcraft in art from the Renaissance to the end of the 19th century. It will
feature prints and drawings by artists including Dürer, Goya, Delacroix,
Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, alongside classical Greek vessels and
Renaissance maiolica.
Efforts to understand and interpret seemingly malevolent
deeds – as well apportion blame for them and elicit confessions through hideous
acts of torture – have had a place in society since classical antiquity and
Biblical times. Men, women and children have all been accused of sorcery. The
magus, or wise practitioner of ‘natural magic’ or occult ‘sciences’, has
traditionally been male, but the majority of those accused and punished for
witchcraft, especially since the Reformation, have been women. They are shown
as monstrous hags with devil-worshipping followers. They represent an inversion
of a well-ordered society and the natural world.
The focus of the exhibition is on prints and drawings from
the British Museum’s collection, alongside a few loans from the V&A, the
Ashmolean, Tate Britain and the British Library. Witches fly on broomsticks or
backwards on dragons or beasts, as in Albrecht Dürer’s Witch Riding backwards on a Goat
of 1501, or Hans Baldung’s Witches’
Sabbath from 1510. They are often depicted within cave-like
kitchens surrounded by demons, performing evil spells, or raising the dead
within magic circles, as in the powerful work of Salvator Rosa, Jacques de
Gheyn and Jan van der Velde.
Francisco de Goya turned the subject of witches into an art
form all of its own, whereby grotesque women conducting hideous activities on
animals and children were represented in strikingly beautiful aquatint
etchings. Goya used them as a way of satirising divisive social, political and
religious issues of his day. Witches were also shown as bewitching seductresses
intent on ensnaring their male victims, seen in the wonderful etching by
Giovanni Battista Castiglione of Circe, who turned Odysseus’ companions into
beasts.
During the Romantic period, Henry Fuseli’s Weird Sisters from Macbeth
influenced generations of theatre-goers, and illustrations of Goethe’s Faust were popularised by
Eugène Delacroix. By the end of the 19th century, hideous old hags with
distended breasts and snakes for hair were mostly replaced by sexualised and
mysteriously exotic sirens of feminine evil, seen in the exhibition in the work
of Edward Burne-Jones, Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Odilon Redon.
The exhibition will also include several classical Greek
vessels and examples of Renaissance maiolica to emphasise the importance of the
subject in the decorative arts.
http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_on/exhibitions/witches_and_wicked_bodies.aspx
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