Tuesday 31 October 2017

Halloween Venuses: Witches by Luis Ricardo Falero


Witches going to their Sabbath (1878)


This painting by the Andalusian artist Luis Ricardo Falero (1851-1896) is, without doubt, the greatest painting of witches!  Not only does it feature some of the most voluptuously gorgeous witches ever (the witch in the foreground could raise the dead) but it has bats, flying monsters, ghouls and a goat.


Witches going to their Sabbath, study


Falero studied in Paris (having walked there from Spain) giving up a position in the Spanish Navy.  He eventually settled in London and died there at the young age of forty-five.  


Study of a witch


Falero's painting almost always contained naked or near naked women and often in a fantastical way as with his witches.  Ignoring, on the whole, the wizened crones of earlier times, Falero's witches were all curvaceous, gorgeous women.


Festival of the Witches (1880)


Two points on broom etiquette can be noted in the two paintings above.  Firstly, the witches' brooms are shown as flying brush first, which was the normal way before the more recent rocket-like brush at the rear depiction.  Secondly, his witches avoid any tasteless, sitting astride the broomstick, poses.   In fact this witch is decorously riding side-saddle!

1 comment:

  1. I do love Falero! His women are alaways stunningly beautiful and wonderfully voluptuous. As you say, the witch in the foreground is so lovely, such perfect breasts!

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