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Two light-skinned women appear at a rectangular window opening, as if you’re standing just outside the ledge. On the right, a younger woman leans forward with her left forearm stretched along the sill as her right elbow bends so her fist props her chin. She looks directly outward with a small, knowing smile. Her chestnut-brown hair is tied with a red ribbon, and she wears a soft white dress with a wide neckline and the sleeves pushed back to her elbows, exposing her forearms. On the left, a possibly older woman peeks from behind a partially opened shutter. A creamy white shawl covers her hair, and she lifts it to hide the lower half of her face, as if stifling laughter. Behind them, the interior is deep shadow, making their faces and white fabric feel close, vivid, and life-sized.

Spanish artist Bartolomé Esteban Murillo builds the scene on tension via openness versus concealment and invitation versus discretion. The older figure’s covered smile matches period ideas of decorum (especially for women of status) while the younger woman’s direct gaze feels unusually candid. Because their identities are unknown, the picture resists a single reading. Some viewers have imagined a chaperone guarding a young woman’s public appearance while others have viewed the window as a threshold of commerce and flirtation. Murillo heightens that uncertainty by turning the window into a painted frame-within-a-frame, borrowing from Dutch “eye-deceiving” devices that make us feel addressed. Painted in 17th-century Seville, where Murillo was celebrated for both devotional works and scenes of everyday life, this small moment feels like a study in how women are seen and how they choose to look back.

Two light-skinned women appear at a rectangular window opening, as if you’re standing just outside the ledge. On the right, a younger woman leans forward with her left forearm stretched along the sill as her right elbow bends so her fist props her chin. She looks directly outward with a small, knowing smile. Her chestnut-brown hair is tied with a red ribbon, and she wears a soft white dress with a wide neckline and the sleeves pushed back to her elbows, exposing her forearms. On the left, a possibly older woman peeks from behind a partially opened shutter. A creamy white shawl covers her hair, and she lifts it to hide the lower half of her face, as if stifling laughter. Behind them, the interior is deep shadow, making their faces and white fabric feel close, vivid, and life-sized. Spanish artist Bartolomé Esteban Murillo builds the scene on tension via openness versus concealment and invitation versus discretion. The older figure’s covered smile matches period ideas of decorum (especially for women of status) while the younger woman’s direct gaze feels unusually candid. Because their identities are unknown, the picture resists a single reading. Some viewers have imagined a chaperone guarding a young woman’s public appearance while others have viewed the window as a threshold of commerce and flirtation. Murillo heightens that uncertainty by turning the window into a painted frame-within-a-frame, borrowing from Dutch “eye-deceiving” devices that make us feel addressed. Painted in 17th-century Seville, where Murillo was celebrated for both devotional works and scenes of everyday life, this small moment feels like a study in how women are seen and how they choose to look back.

“Dos mujeres en una ventana (Two Women at a Window)” by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo (Spanish) - Oil on canvas / c. 1655–1660 - National Gallery of Art (Washington, DC) #WomenInArt #BartoloméEstebanMurillo #Murillo #NationalGalleryofArt #NGA #SpanishBaroque #BaroquePainting #SpanishArt #arte #artText

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54 works—many reunited for the first time—explore the emotional power and spiritual intensity of sacred sculpture in Baroque Granada.

#JoséDeMora #SpanishBaroque #GranadaCathedral #SacredArt #BaroqueArt #Exhibition #Granada
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