'Joyously subversive sex goddesses': the artists who gave witches a spellbinding makeover
We all know what a witch looks like. A gnarled old face full of warts with teeth missing and bright green skin. Then theres the long black coat, the tall black hat and lets not forget the sizable crooked nose, sniffing the fumes rising from a bubbling cauldron in a room festooned with cobwebs.
But thats not what witches look like at all, or at least not according a hefty new art book being published in time for Halloween. In this compendium of witchy women, from Renaissance paintings to modern Wicca, the caricature of the evil hag is turned upside down. Witchcraft, the latest volume in Taschens Library of Esoterica, finds evidence from artists as diverse as Auguste Rodin and Kiki Smith for its revisionist view that witches are typically young, glamorous practitioners of highly sexualised magick. The cover painting, by Victorian artist JW Waterhouse, depicts the ancient enchantress Circe in pale, red-lipped pre-Raphaelite ecstasy and the fun just keeps coming. The witches here are powerful feminist sex goddesses whose rites and incantations are joyously subversive.
Theres nothing respectably academic about Witchcraft. One of its editors is herself a witch and it includes photographs of 1960s and 70s Wiccans practitioners of modern pagan magick. Consecration of Wine, Stewart Farrars misty monochrome 1971 photograph, portrays his wife, Janet, bare-breasted, filling a raised chalice in a modern ritual meant to invoke the sacred union of male and female the alchemical wedding. Another photo shows a group known as the Farrar coven lying on their backs to form a pentagram in a British back garden in 1981.
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2021/oct/27/joyously-subversive-sex-goddesses-witchcraft-halloween-evil-hag?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=facebook&fbclid=IwAR3RDiU_saOTBuoiWoEqOiyiWT31Jvm5uqKuQcZJdReC_2W7jJqC9rl4JbQ