Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746–1828) is regarded
as the most important Spanish artist of the late eighteenth and early
nineteenth centuries. Over the course of his long career, Goya moved from jolly
and lighthearted to deeply pessimistic and searching in his paintings,
drawings, etchings, and frescoes. Born in Fuendetodos, he later moved with his
parents to Saragossa and, at age fourteen, began studying with the painter José
Luzán Martínez (1710–1785).
In 1746, the year of Goya's birth, the Spanish
crown was under the rule of Ferdinand VI. Subsequently, the Bourbon king
Charles III (r. 1759–88) ruled the country as an enlightened monarch
sympathetic to change, employing ministers who supported radical economic,
industrial, and agricultural reform. Goya came to artistic maturity during this
age of enlightenment. In Madrid, the painter brothers Francisco (1734–1795) and
Ramón Bayeu y Subías (1746–1793) had set up shop in 1763 and Goya soon joined
their studio, eventually marrying their sister Josefa. He visited Italy in
1770, after two failed attempts in drawing competitions at the Real Academia
des Bellas Artes in San Fernando.
Goya's introduction to
the royal workshops, a relationship that lasted the rest of his life and
spanned four ruling monarchies, began in 1774. The German painter Anton Raphael
Mengs asked Goya to work on tapestry
cartoons, or preliminary paintings, for the Royal Tapestry Factory
at Santa Bárbara. Goya painted sixty-three cartoons for two royal palaces,
which included nine hunting scenes for the dining room at San Lorenzo del
Escorial, and ten cartoons for tapestries destined for the dining room at El
Pardo.
The tapestries glorify leisure activities of the rich, poor, young, and
old in a playful Rococo manner comparable to the style of Tiepolo.
The Blind Guitarist (22.63.29)
was originally designed for the antechamber at El Pardo and comes from this
genre. The tapestry weavers, frustrated by its complex composition, returned
the cartoon to Goya. However, before simplifying it, Goya preserved the
original design in a copperplate etching, the largest print he ever made. Las Meninas
(promised gift) is one of a group of etchings completed by Goya
based on paintings by Velázquez. Goya made these etchings
upon Mengs's suggestion that he study Velázquez portraits in the royal
collection.
At the age of forty, Goya was appointed painter to King Charles III,
and, in 1789, he was promoted to court painter under the newly accessioned
Charles IV (r. 1788–1808). The year 1789 also marked the fall of French
monarchy (with Charles IV unwilling to assist his cousin Louis XVI), and in
1793 France declared war on Spain. Around this time, Goya traveled to Cádiz in
Andalusia with Sebastián Martínez y Pérez, a wealthy businessman and art
collector. Goya's remarkable portrait of his friend (06.289)
captures the subject's likeness and intensity by emphasizing his personal
expression, inner character, and humanity. His social standing is conveyed in
his demeanor and the quality of his clothing, and his role as an astute
collector of books, prints, and paintings is suggested by the sheet of paper in
his hand.
Having survived an extended period of illness in Cádiz, Goya emerged
months later completely deaf, but able to return to Madrid in 1793. In 1799, he
completed and published a suite of eighty allegorical etchings called the Caprichos;
Out Hunting for Teeth (18.64.12)
and The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters (18.64.43)
are two etchings from this series. They introduce a world of witches, ghosts,
and fantastic creatures that invade the mind, particularly during dreams,
nightmarish visions symbolizing a world against reason. That same year, Goya
was promoted by the crown to first court painter and spent the next two years
working on a large-scale portrait of the family of Charles IV
(Museo del Prado, Madrid). Harking back to the compositions of Velázquez,
Goya placed the royal family in the foreground and, in the background, himself
at an easel. The painting is simultaneously a depiction of a united, strong,
and regal monarchy, and a shockingly naturalistic—in some cases even
grotesque—group portrait.
Goya, Napoleon, and Nineteenth-Century Spain
The enlightened monarchy of Charles IV came to an end when Napoleon's armies invaded Spain in 1808. The brutal incursion—which included mass executions of Spanish citizens who rose up in opposition to Napoleon's invasion—culminated in French occupation and the installation of Napoleon's brother, Joseph Bonaparte, on the Spanish throne. Although repulsed by French atrocities, Goya pledged allegiance to Bonaparte, and painted members of the French regime. In 1811, he was awarded the Royal Order of Spain.
The enlightened monarchy of Charles IV came to an end when Napoleon's armies invaded Spain in 1808. The brutal incursion—which included mass executions of Spanish citizens who rose up in opposition to Napoleon's invasion—culminated in French occupation and the installation of Napoleon's brother, Joseph Bonaparte, on the Spanish throne. Although repulsed by French atrocities, Goya pledged allegiance to Bonaparte, and painted members of the French regime. In 1811, he was awarded the Royal Order of Spain.
The Bourbon monarchy was restored with Napoleon's fall in 1814. But
the new king, Ferdinand VII, son of Charles IV, did not share the enlightened
views of his predecessor. He revoked the Constitution, reinstated the
Inquisition, and declared himself absolute monarch. Not long afterward, he
launched a reign of terror. Questioned about his loyalty to the occupiers, Goya
demonstrated his allegiance by commemorating Spain's uprising against the
French regime in two paintings: The Second of May 1808
and The Third of
May 1808 (both Museo del Prado). In the first, Goya depicts a
brutal scene in Madrid's city center, the Puerta del Sol, where Spaniards
fought against French-led soldiers on horseback. The second work illustrates
the execution of captured Spaniards on the Príncipe Pío, a hill just outside
Madrid at that time. The paintings exemplify the dark tonalities and fluid
brushstrokes representative of Goya's later period, as well as the stylistic
influences of Velázquez and Rembrandt.
Goya continued his account of the atrocities of war in a series of
eighty-five prints called The Disasters of War. Executed from 1810 to
1820, the series depicts the travesties witnessed during Spain's struggle for
independence from France. Unlike the Caprichos, this series was never
published during Goya's lifetime, probably because of its pronounced indictment
of war. One Can't Look (22.60.25.26),
an etching from the series, is a powerful and emotionally charged scene of
French occupation and Spanish retaliation that recalls the painting The
Third of May 1808. The innovative composition—critical elements are placed
outside the picture plane and the immediate action is forced to the
foreground—amplifies the overall impact. Although Goya's graphic work is
grounded in the dramatic Baroque
tradition of contrasting lights and darks, recalling Tiepolo's war
scenes and Rembrandt's etchings, The Disasters of War etchings employ
the tradition within a unique compositional framework.
Having no royal commissions during the tumultuous monarchy of
Ferdinand VII, Goya became isolated from political and intellectual life in
Madrid. Between 1820 and 1823, he completed a series of very private works in
fresco at his small country retreat, Quinta del Sordo (the Deaf Man's House).
Today referred to as the Black Paintings, they are compelling in their sinister
and often horrifying scenes with dark, emotional undertones.
Dissatisfied with political developments in Spain, Goya retired to
Bordeaux in 1824 under the guise of seeking medical advice. His final years
were spent there and in Paris.
James
Voorhies
Department of European Paintings, The Metropolitan Museum of Art |
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/goya/hd_goya.htm
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