Francisco

de

Goya


Goya y Lucientes, Francisco José de (1746-1828) was a Spanish Romantic artist whose multifarious paintings, drawings, and engravings reflected contemporary historical upheavals, and influenced important 19th-century and 20th-century painters. Like Velázquez, Goya was a Spanish court painter whose best work was done apart from his official duties. He is known for his scenes of violence, especially those prompted by the French invasion of Spain. The series of etchings "Los desastres de la guerra" ("The Disasters of War", 1810-14) records the horrors of the Napoleonic invasion. His masterpieces in painting include "La Maja Desnuda" and "La Maja Vestida" (circa 1800-05). For the bold technique of his paintings, the haunting satire of his etchings, and his belief that the artist's vision is more important than tradition, Goya is often called 'the first of the moderns'. His uncompromising portrayal of his times marks the beginning of 19th-century realism.

  Francisco de Goya was born in Fuendetodos, a village in northern Spain. The family later moved to Zaragoza, where Goya's father worked as a gilder. At about 14 young Goya was apprenticed to José Luzán, a local painter. Later he went to Italy to continue his study of art. On returning to Zaragoza in 1771, he painted frescoes for the local cathedral. These works, done in the decorative rococo tradition, established Goya's artistic reputation. In 1773 he married Josefa Bayeu, sister of artist Francisco Bayeu. The couple had many children, but only one survived to adulthood.

From 1775 to 1792, Goya painted cartoons (designs) for the royal tapestry factory in Madrid. This was the most important period in his artistic development. As a tapestry designer, Goya did his first genre paintings.

The experience helped him become a keen observer of human behavior. He was also influenced by neoclassicism, which was gaining favor over the rococo style. Finally, his study of the works of Velázquez in the royal collection resulted in a looser, more spontaneous painting technique.

At the same time, Goya achieved his first popular success. He became established as a portrait painter to the Spanish aristocracy. He was elected to the Royal Academy of San Fernando in 1780, named painter to the king in 1786, and made a court painter in 1789.

A serious illness in 1792 left Goya permanently deaf. Isolated from others by his deafness, he became increasingly occupied with the fantasies and inventions of his imagination and with critical and satirical observations of mankind. He evolved a bold, free new style close to caricature. In 1799 he published the Caprichos, a series of etchings satirizing human folly and weakness. His portraits became penetrating characterizations, revealing their subjects as Goya saw them. In his religious frescoes he employed a broad, free style and an earthy realism unprecedented in religious art.

Goya served as director of painting at the Royal Academy from 1795 to 1797 and was appointed first Spanish court painter in 1799. During the Napoleonic invasion and the Spanish war of independence from 1808 to 1814, Goya served as court painter to the French. He expressed his horror of armed conflict in "The Disasters of War", a series of starkly realistic etchings on the atrocities of war. They were not published until 1863, long after Goya's death.

Upon the restoration of the Spanish monarchy, Goya was pardoned for serving the French, but his work was not favored by the new king. He was called before the Inquisition to explain his earlier portrait of "La Maja Desnuda", one of the few nudes in Spanish art at that time.

In 1816 he published his etchings on bullfighting, called the Tauromaquia. From 1819 to 1824 Goya lived in seclusion in a house outside Madrid. Free from court restrictions, he adopted an increasingly personal style. In the "Black Paintings", executed on the walls of his house, Goya gave expression to his darkest visions. A similar nightmarish quality haunts the satirical Disparates, a series of etchings also called Proverbios.

In 1824, after the failure of an attempt to restore liberal government, Goya went into voluntary exile in France. He settled in Bordeaux, continuing to work until his death there on April 16, 1828. Today many of his best paintings hang in Madrid's Prado Art Museum.


 

"La maja vestida" (1800-03) Oil on canvas, 95 x 190 cm - 37.4 x 74.8 in. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.

"Charles IV of Spain and His Family" (1800-01) Oil on canvas, 280 × 336 cm - 110.24 × 132.28 in. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.

"The Third of May 1808" (1814) Oil on canvas, 266 × 345 cm - 104.7 x 135.8 in. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.

"Plucked turkey and sardines" (1808-12) Oil on canvas, 45 × 62.5 cm - 17.7 x 24.6 in. Alte Pinakothek, Munich, Germany.

"The Wedding" (1792) Oil on canvas, 267 x 293 cm - 105.1 x 115.4 in. Museo del Prado. Madrid, Spain.

"El Quitasol" (1777)

"El lazarillo de Tormes" (1818-12)

"La gallina ciega" (1788) Oil on canvas, 41 x 44 cm - 16.1 x 17.3 in. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.

"Self Portrait" (circa 1771-75) Oil on canvas, 58 x 44 cm - 22.8 x 17.3 in. Colección Conde de Elda, Madrid, Spain.

"Two Old Men Eating Soup" (1819-23) Oil on wall transferred onto canvas, 49.3 x 83.4 cm - 19.4 x 32.8 in.


Text source: 'Webmuseum' (www.ibiblio.org/wm) and others.

Related Artists:

Related Terms: Romanticism, Rococo, Realism, Neoclassicism, Genre Painting, Engraving, Etching, Cartoon, Caricature, Fresco.


"Portrait of Francisco de Goya" (1826) Vicente López y Portaña

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