
Witches' Sabbath
Francisco Goya·1820
Historical Context
The Great He-Goat, also called Witches' Sabbath, is the largest of Goya's fourteen Black Paintings, spanning nearly four meters across the wall of the Quinta del Sordo. A massive dark figure — Satan in the form of a he-goat — presides over a congregation of terrified, distorted human faces pressed together in a semicircle. A solitary young woman sits apart at the right, often interpreted as a novice or victim. Painted between 1820 and 1823 during Ferdinand VII's repressive reign, the scene has been read as an allegory of political demagoguery and mass hysteria. Transferred to canvas in 1874, it now dominates an entire wall of the Prado's Black Paintings gallery.
Technical Analysis
Goya uses an extremely dark palette with figures emerging from near-total blackness, their distorted faces illuminated by an unseen light source. The sweeping compositional arc of huddled figures creates a claustrophobic intensity unique among his works.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the solitary young woman seated apart at the right edge: separate from the huddled congregation pressing toward the central devil figure, she sits in isolation — often interpreted as a novice, innocent, or victim.
- ◆Look at the great he-goat dominating the left side: the dark, massive figure of Satan presides over the assembly with a gravity that makes the scene feel more like political demagoguery than supernatural fantasy.
- ◆Observe the distorted faces of the congregation: each face pressed into the semicircle is individually grotesque — the variety of ugliness creates a collective portrait of fanaticism.
- ◆Find the compositional arc of the huddled figures: sweeping from the solitary woman on the right around to the goat on the left, the congregation forms a shape that suggests both physical crowding and psychological enclosure.

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