GOYA Y LUCIENTES, FRANCISCO JOSÉ DE

fränthēsˈkō hōsāˈ thā gōˈyä ē loothēānˈtās, 1746–1828, Spanish painter and graphic artist. Goya is generally conceded to be the greatest painter of his era.

Early Life and Work

After studying in Zaragoza and Madrid and then in Rome, Goya returned c.1775 to Madrid and married Josefa Bayeu, sister of Francisco Bayeu, a prominent painter. Soon after his return he was employed to paint several series of tapestry designs for the royal manufactory of Santa Barbara, which focused attention on his talent. Depicting scenes of everyday life, they are painted with rococo freedom, gaiety, and charm, enhanced by a certain earthy reality unusual in such cartoons. In these early works he revealed the candor of observation that was later to make him the most graphic and savage of satirists.

Goya possessed a driving ambition throughout his life (the only masters he acknowledged were "Nature," Velázquez, and Rembrandt). His first important portrait commission, to paint Floridablanca, the prime minister, resulted in a painting intended to flatter and please an important sitter, heavy with technical display but less penetrating than the portraits he made of the rich and powerful thereafter. He became painter to the king, Charles III, in 1786, and court painter in 1789, after the accession of Charles IV and Maria Luisa. His royal portraits are painted with an extraordinary realism. Nevertheless, his portraits were acceptable and he was commissioned to repeat them.

Later Life and Mature Work

In 1793 Goya suffered a terrible illness, now thought to have been either labyrinthitis or lead poisoning, that was nearly fatal and left him deaf. This created for him an even greater isolation than was his by nature. After 1793 he began to create uncommissioned works, particularly small cabinet paintings. His portraits of the duchess of Alba, who enjoyed the painter's close friendship and love, are elegant and direct and not flattering. Almost all the notables of Madrid posed for him during those years. Two of his most celebrated paintings, Maja nude and Maja clothed (both: Prado), were painted c.1797–1805. Goya did his chief religious work in 1798, creating a monumental set of dramatic frescoes in the Church of San Antonio de la Florida, Madrid.

Graphic Works

It is in the etching and aquatint media that his profound disillusionment with humanity is most brutally revealed. In 1799 his Caprichos appeared, a series of etchings in the nature of grotesque social satire. They were followed (1810–13) by the terrible Desastres de la guerra [disasters of war], magnificent etchings suggested by the Napoleonic invasions of Spain. They constitute an indictment of human evil and an outrage at a world given over to war and corruption. Two frenzied paintings known as May 2 and May 3, 1808 (both: Prado) also record atrocities of war.

Goya executed two other series of etchings, the Tauromaquia [the bullfight] and the Disparates, the flowers of a tortured, nightmare vision. Throughout the Napoleonic period Goya retained favor under changing regimes. At the age of 70 he retired to his villa, where he is thought to have decorated his walls with a series of "Black Paintings" of macabre subjects, such as Saturn Devouring His Children, Witches' Sabbath, The Dog and The Three Fates (all: Prado). While these mysterious paintings have long been among his most celebrated works, some controversial recent scholarship has indicated that the paintings may be by Goya's son or grandson. Goya's last years, harried by further illness, were spent in voluntary exile in Bordeaux, where he began work in lithography that foreshadowed the style of the great 19th-century painters.

Collections

All phases of Goya's enormous and varied production can be appreciated fully only in Madrid. However, the artist's work is also represented in many European and American collections, notably in the Hispanic Society of America, the Metropolitan Museum, and the Frick Collection, all in New York City, and in the museums of Boston and Chicago.

Bibliography

See P. Gassier and J. Wilson, Goya: His Life and Work (with a catalogue raisonné, tr. 1971); P. Gassier, Francisco Goya: Drawings (tr. 1973); J. A. Tomlinson, Francisco Goya: The Tapestry Cartoons and Early Career at the Court of Madrid (1989); R. Hughes, Goya (2003).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Goya Y Lucientes Francisco JosE De
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books on: Goya Y Lucientes Francisco JosE De  - 75 results

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...Madrid, Manuel G. Hernandez, 1887. Lefort Paul: Francisco Goya : Paris, Ed. Sagot, 1877. Lefort Paul: Francisco Jose Goya y Lucientes; in Blanc, Charles--Histoire des Peintres...
...belonged to a Basque family named Goya that had recently settled in Aragon. His mother, Dona Gracia Lucientes, came of a family of Aragonese...in this outlying village of Francisco de Paula Jose de Goya y Lucientes. Brought up in daily contact...
...obscured by his pupil. GOYA Francisco JoseGoya y Lucientes was born on 30 March 1746...bequeath". At the age of fourteen Francisco Goya was apprenticed to the Saragossa painter Jose Luzan y Martinez 1710-85 , a busy...
...study by , Barcelona, 1887. PAEZ ELENA. Grabados y dibujos de Goya en la Biblioteca Nacional. Catalogo-guia , Madrid, 1946. PETRUCCI ALFREDO. Los Caprichos di Francisco Goya y Lucientes with an introduction by , Rome, 1946. PIOT EUGENE...
...Nicolas, 201 Ferrater Mora, Jose, 26 , 191 , 195 Feudalism...Angel, 190 , 197 Gaos, Jose, 10 , 25 Generation concept...Johann Wolfgang, 125 Goya y Lucientes, Francisco Jose de, 82 Granell...Constance Shaw, 83 Menendez y Pelayo, Marcelino, 69...
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journal articles on: Goya Y Lucientes Francisco JosE De  - 4 results

 
 
...pasiones, del gesto y de la accion teatral...illustrations drawn by Francisco de Paula Marti Mora...El museo pictorico y escala optica (1715...in the process.35 Goya includes Palominos...translated by his friend Jose Nicolas de Azara...brother-in-law Francisco Bayeu (1734-1795...
...women of all ages and classes, Francisco Goya (1746-1828) lived in a time...myth as a brutal erotic tale, Goya was unwilling to gloss over male...recommend The Self-Portraits of Francisco Goya, an excellent book by art historian...
...and, soon, the concert hall? Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes was born on March 30, 1746, in...does the loss of hearing, and Goya grew deeply distrustful of the...his acquired "de" ("de Goya y Lucientes," as he styled himself...
...haunting melody, La maja y el ruisenor/The Maja...tradition and modernity, Goya came to personify intriguing...countrys recent past, Goya was the subject of readings...leftists alike, all claimed Goya as one of their own...raged in Spain, poet Jose Bergamin wrote an impassioned...


 

magazine articles on: Goya Y Lucientes Francisco JosE De  - 6 results

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...looked at several narrative works by Francisco Goya, Kathe Kollwitz, Frank Gaylord...Prisoners! What political messages was Goya delivering in his large-scale painting...Picassos depiction? Picasso and Goya were both documenting what for them...
Goya: First Painter to the Spanish Court...occupation, and the Inquisition--Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes focused his uncompromising vision on...the three talented Bayeu brothers--Francisco, Manuel, and Ramon--whose artistic...
...fantasy." LOS CAPRICHOS," by Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828), one of the...to the Spanish royal family, Goya achieved recognition as an unparalleled...Goyas Caprichos" (1999). "Francisco Goya: Los Caprichos," is on...
...artistic reaction to conflict. Francisco Jose Goya (y Lucientes) (1746-1828) was a court...Picasso who would follow him, Goya did not confine his talent to...war for Spanish independence, Goya served as a court painter to the...
...In Russia The Spanish painter Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes worked far from Russia, but the...Russian origin, created El Mundo de Goya (Goyas World) for the Chelyabinsk...attractive to audiences. El Mundo de Goya similarly possesses a deeply moving...
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newspaper articles on: Goya Y Lucientes Francisco JosE De  - 3 results

 
 
...for serious fans of artist Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes visiting Madrid. Goya painted...the 1984 film "Carmen." Goya is well connected in Spain...for him. The birthplace of Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes is in Fuendetodos, a village...
...are just three sites with major Goya connections. Many Spanish cities large and small have works by Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes - from etchings to tapestries...If a traveler cannot find a Goya every day, there are the other...
...around the particles, and Mrs. Zahn achieves her complex tonal effects. She believes that Spanish artist Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes started the use of aquatint for its subtle tonalities. Mrs. Zahn arranged her show by themes rather than...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Goya Y Lucientes Francisco JosE De  - 1 result

 
 
GOYA Y LUCIENTES, FRANCISCO JOSE DE franthes ko hosa tha go ya e loothean...Spanish painter and graphic artist. Goya is generally conceded to be the greatest...and married Josefa Bayeu, sister of Francisco Bayeu, a prominent painter. Soon...


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