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Two women sit on a deep window ledge, shown in profile against a dreamlike view of Córdoba, Spain. At right, a dark-haired young woman in working-class dress folds her legs beneath her and raises a tarot card for the other to see. At left, her companion leans back with a long, elegant neck, heavy-lidded eyes, and a face turned inward with melancholy. Their bodies are close, but their moods do not meet. The fortune-teller seems alert, almost sly. The other woman appears distant, absorbed by private sorrow. 

Spanish artist Julio Romero de Torres stages them with velvety skin, dark hair, and sculptural stillness, setting their figures against a city assembled like emotional theater. In the middle distance, another tiny drama unfolds: a woman seems to reach toward a man as if trying to stop him, while farther back a red-shawled figure lingers in a doorway. The whole scene feels paused between prophecy and aftermath.

Romero de Torres was already a celebrated painter by 1920, known for images of women that fused Andalusian identity, symbolism, desire, and unease. Here, he turns card-reading into a meditation on love’s imbalance. The cards are not light entertainment, but are a warning. The museum’s interpretation links the painting to sadness, indifference, and dangers of loving a married man, with the secondary scene acting almost like a cinematic flash of the story behind the sitter’s stress.

The layered storytelling matters. the picture is not simply about “fortune” but about emotional knowledge, especially the kind women are left to carry, intuit, and survive. Romero de Torres often used paired women to suggest dualities like sacred and profane, innocence and experience, or hope and resignation. In this work, the contrast is quieter and more human: one woman reads signs, the other lives their consequences. The invented yet recognizable Córdoba behind them turns private heartbreak into civic myth, making female feeling the true monument at the center of the canvas.

Two women sit on a deep window ledge, shown in profile against a dreamlike view of Córdoba, Spain. At right, a dark-haired young woman in working-class dress folds her legs beneath her and raises a tarot card for the other to see. At left, her companion leans back with a long, elegant neck, heavy-lidded eyes, and a face turned inward with melancholy. Their bodies are close, but their moods do not meet. The fortune-teller seems alert, almost sly. The other woman appears distant, absorbed by private sorrow. Spanish artist Julio Romero de Torres stages them with velvety skin, dark hair, and sculptural stillness, setting their figures against a city assembled like emotional theater. In the middle distance, another tiny drama unfolds: a woman seems to reach toward a man as if trying to stop him, while farther back a red-shawled figure lingers in a doorway. The whole scene feels paused between prophecy and aftermath. Romero de Torres was already a celebrated painter by 1920, known for images of women that fused Andalusian identity, symbolism, desire, and unease. Here, he turns card-reading into a meditation on love’s imbalance. The cards are not light entertainment, but are a warning. The museum’s interpretation links the painting to sadness, indifference, and dangers of loving a married man, with the secondary scene acting almost like a cinematic flash of the story behind the sitter’s stress. The layered storytelling matters. the picture is not simply about “fortune” but about emotional knowledge, especially the kind women are left to carry, intuit, and survive. Romero de Torres often used paired women to suggest dualities like sacred and profane, innocence and experience, or hope and resignation. In this work, the contrast is quieter and more human: one woman reads signs, the other lives their consequences. The invented yet recognizable Córdoba behind them turns private heartbreak into civic myth, making female feeling the true monument at the center of the canvas.

“La Buenaventura (The Fortune-telling)" by Julio Romero de Torres (Spanish) - Oil on canvas / 1920 - Museo Carmen Thyssen Málaga (Málaga, Spain) #WomenInArt #JulioRomeroDeTorres #RomeroDeTorres #MuseoCarmenThyssenMalaga #arte #BlueskyArt #artText #spanishartist #SpanishArt #FortuneTelling #1920sArt

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#JulioRomerodeTorres
Retrato de una Dama (1925)

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#WomanInTheWindow289
#FrauAmFenster
#FemmeALaFenêtre
#MujerEnLaVentana
#art
#JulioRomeroDeTorres

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Nuestra Señora de Andalucía de Julio Romero de Torres: misterio, belleza y simbolismo
Nuestra Señora de Andalucía de Julio Romero de Torres: misterio, belleza y simbolismo YouTube video by La Cámara del Arte

Julio Romero de Torres pintó a Nuestra Señora de Andalucía como solo él sabía: devoción y tierra. Una virgen que no mira al cielo, sino a su pueblo. Arte, fe y sur en una misma mirada. 💃🕊️

#JulioRomeroDeTorres #Andalucía #ArteEspañol

youtu.be/NbsUjSQq1tU

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#JulioRomeroDeTorres
Dora The Cordoban

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Preview
El álbum de fotos de los Romero de Torres, 150 años en más de 4.000 imágenes María del Mar Ibáñez, archivera en el Archivo Histórico Provincial de Córdoba y experta en el pintor, ofrecerá este miércoles a las 20 horas una conferencia en Vimcorsa sobre el legado fotográfico de...

#Córdoba #JulioRomerodeTorres y su familia #Arte y #Cultura esencia Cordobesa 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼
www.diariocordoba.com/cultura/2025...

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#JulioRomerodeTorres,
Córdoba Judía. (1913)

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Jardines de Orive (Córdoba) #mural #wallart #julioromerodetorres #jardinesdeorive #cordoba #fotocallejera #fotodecalle #streetphotography #streetphotographer

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Fuente Santa

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El Pozo

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More than half of Spanish painter Julio Romero de Torres 1,000+ oil paintings are portraits including this unfinished depiction of "The Countess of Colomera" Magdalena Muñoz Cobo, granddaughter of Romero's close friend General Diego Muñoz Cobo, Minister of War.

The painting highlights Romero's ability to capture the beauty and personality of his models with the fair skinned Magdalena seated on a decorated wooden bench and elegantly posed with legs crossed in profile as she turns her head to look directly at us. Her dark brown hair is styled neatly under a jeweled tiara, yet, our attention is drawn to her full-length, shiny silver-colored sleeveless silk gown and its long, lavish lavender-colored train (with white fur trim) which multiplies the regal impression by extending from behind her and around to the fill entire foreground. Rounding out the look are well-lit delicate-looking heeled shoes prominently exhibited from her stylish seated pose.

The background is a moody, atmospheric landscape with a dark, sunset palette showing a large body of water and a distant shoreline with hills. Romero's blend of realism with degrees of softness in the brushstrokes (especially in the rendering of fabrics) enhances the overall impression of grandeur and sophistication.

The Museum of Julio Romero de Torres, at his former residence in Córdoba, Spain, houses many beautiful examples of his works including this portrait -- one of two paintings unfinished when he died at the age of 55.

More than half of Spanish painter Julio Romero de Torres 1,000+ oil paintings are portraits including this unfinished depiction of "The Countess of Colomera" Magdalena Muñoz Cobo, granddaughter of Romero's close friend General Diego Muñoz Cobo, Minister of War. The painting highlights Romero's ability to capture the beauty and personality of his models with the fair skinned Magdalena seated on a decorated wooden bench and elegantly posed with legs crossed in profile as she turns her head to look directly at us. Her dark brown hair is styled neatly under a jeweled tiara, yet, our attention is drawn to her full-length, shiny silver-colored sleeveless silk gown and its long, lavish lavender-colored train (with white fur trim) which multiplies the regal impression by extending from behind her and around to the fill entire foreground. Rounding out the look are well-lit delicate-looking heeled shoes prominently exhibited from her stylish seated pose. The background is a moody, atmospheric landscape with a dark, sunset palette showing a large body of water and a distant shoreline with hills. Romero's blend of realism with degrees of softness in the brushstrokes (especially in the rendering of fabrics) enhances the overall impression of grandeur and sophistication. The Museum of Julio Romero de Torres, at his former residence in Córdoba, Spain, houses many beautiful examples of his works including this portrait -- one of two paintings unfinished when he died at the age of 55.

La Condesa de Colomera by Julio Romero de Torres (Spanish) - Oil on canvas / 1930 - Museo Julio Romero de Torres (Córdoba, Spain) #womeninart #art #artwork #portraitofawoman #womensart #portrait #unfinishedart #JulioRomerodeTorres #oilpainting #SpanishArt #SpanishArtist #MuseoJulioRomerodeTorres

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#JulioRomerodeTorres

Jugando al monte o Humo y azar, (1924)

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Sketch detail version of Julio Romero de Torres' "A la amiga", 1905/1906

Sketch detail version of Julio Romero de Torres' "A la amiga", 1905/1906

Sketch version of Julio Romero de Torres' "A la amiga", 1905/1906

Sketch version of Julio Romero de Torres' "A la amiga", 1905/1906

"A la amiga"
Romero de Torres (Julio Romero de Torres), 1905/1906
Museo de Bellas Artes de Asturias, Oviedo/Asturias, Spain
8.25 x 5 in (21,5 x 12,7 cm)
Ink marker and color pens on plain 70 G/M² sketchbook paper
01/04/25
#kuretake #romerodetorres #julioromerodetorres #museobbaaasturias

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Jardines de Orive (Córdoba) #jardinesdeOrive #fotocallejera #fotocalle #fotodecalle #streetphotographer #streetphotography #streetphotographyworldwide #julioromerodetorres #mural #wallart #arteurbano #streetart #CordobaEsp #Andalucia #Spain

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#JulioRomeroDeTorres

Dora The Cordoban

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Jardines de Orive (Córdoba) #jardinesdeOrive #fotocallejera #fotocalle #streetphotography #julioromerodetorres #mural #wallart #arteurbano #streetart #CordobaEsp #Andalucia #Spain

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