1 August – 1 September 2013

Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art

Witches & Wicked Bodies

27 July – 3 November 2013

John Raphael Smith after Henry Fuseli, The Weird Sisters, 1785 © British Museum

An exploration of how witches and witchcraft have been depicted by artists over the past 500 years, including works by Albrecht Dürer, Francisco de Goya and William Blake, alongside pieces by 20th century artists such as Paula Rego and Kiki Smith.


The exhibition comprises 16th and 17th century prints and drawings that through the advent of the printing press spread artists' ideas, myths and fears about witches from country to country, successfully embedding these images in our visual culture to the present day. Modern works included in the show challenge how these myths have formed the basis for negative cultural representations of women. 

 

Including major works on loan from the British Museum, the National Gallery (London), Tate, the Victoria & Albert Museum, as well as works from the Galleries’ own collections, Witches & Wicked Bodies will be an investigation of extremes, exploring the highly exaggerated ways in which witches have been represented, from hideous hags to beautiful seductresses.

 

This exhibition is in Modern Two. 

 

Supported by the Patrons of the National Galleries of Scotland. In association with the British Museum.

 

Mon–Sun, 10am–5pm (6pm during August)

Adult £7, concessions £5

 

 

 

Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art

Modern One: 75 Belford Road, EH4 3DR

Modern Two: 73 Belford Road, EH4 3DS

0131 624 6200

www.nationalgalleries.org/modernartgalleries

Events

2 August 2013
'Round about the Cauldron': The Witchcraft Scenes of Salvator Rosa

12:45–13:30pm

Free admission


 

19 August 2013
The Potency of the Performed Act

12:45–13:30pm

Free admission


 

20 August 2013
Talk: Fatal Magic: The Attractions of Witchcraft

6–7pm

Free admission, booking essential. 


 

30 August 2013
Haunted and Fairy-Taken Witches: The Place of the Restless Dead in Scottish Witch Trials

12:45–13:30pm

Free admission