Encarnación Bustillo Salomón

Encarnación Paula Bustillo Salomón (7 June 1876 – c. 1960) was a Spanish painter known for the costumbrismo genre, landscapes, and still lifes.

[7] In 1945 Bustillo presented the painting entitled Vendedoras de pescado (Fish Vendors) at the National Exhibition of Fine Arts, which was described by ABC's critic, as "a picture of a strong racial type".

[8] In 1946 she participated in the First Women's Fine Arts Salon, an initiative to open a space for female artists who had usually been excluded.

[9] Encarnación Bustillo Salomón's best-known work is Las camareras de la Virgen (The Virgin's Waitresses).

It shows a group of waitresses in front of the image of the Virgin Mary, adorned for a party, who present a tray to the mayor, who gives a donation.