http://ancientartpodcast.org/87

This is a short excerpt from my lecture "Things That Go Bump: A Visual Survey of Witches, Demons, and Ghosts." Herein we explore the ancient Greek tradition of witchcraft and metamorphosis in two images — one ancient and one modern — of Circe, the definitive witch of Grecian lore and seductive sorceress of Odyssean fame. Waterhouse masterfully betrays her jealous cruelty in those cold, dark, uncaring eyes. Vying for the affection of a handsome lover, the hateful witch Circe poisons the placid pool where the her rival Scylla bathed. Circe's potion of polymorphism transforms the beautiful nymph Scylla to the proverbial "hard place," the loathsome multi-mawed many-tentacled monster, who'd dash the hopes (...and heads) of Odysseus's men sailing "between Scylla and Charybdis." And in the Grecian cup in the MFA, we see a magical elixir similarly perched in wicked Circe's hands while Odysseus's men are in the midst of metamorphosis from her arcane magicks.

For images of the featured works of art, visit http://ancientartpodcast.org/87.

Featured Works of Art:

John William Waterhouse

Circe Invidiosa (Jealous Circe), 1892

South Australian Government Grant 1892

Art Gallery of South Australia

Drinking cup (kylix) depicting scenes from the Odyssey

Greek, Archaic Period, about 560-550 BC

The Painter of the Boston Polyphemos

© Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (99.518)

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