
Francisco Goya
1746–1828 · Spain · Romanticism
The story
Francisco Goya climbed about as high as a painter could in 18th-century Spain. From a provincial town in Aragón he worked his way up to first court painter to the king in Madrid, turning out bright tapestry designs and flattering royal portraits. Then, in the winter of 1792, he was struck down by an illness no one has ever named with certainty, months of fever, dizziness and ringing in the head, and when it passed he was stone deaf, and stayed so for the remaining 35 years of his life. He kept his court position, but something in the work turned inward and dark.
Shut inside his own silence, he made a series of etchings, the Caprichos, full of witches, donkeys and monsters, one of them captioned that the sleep of reason produces monsters. Then history caught up with the private darkness. In 1808 Napoleon's armies poured into Spain, put the emperor's brother on the throne, and the Madrid crowd rose against them; the French shot the rebels in batches through the night. Years later Goya painted that night, a man in a white shirt flinging his arms wide before a faceless firing squad, a single lantern on the ground between them. It is often called the first great modern painting of war, with no glory in it anywhere.
At the end he went further still. Old, deaf, sickened by what he had lived through, he covered the walls of his own farmhouse outside Madrid with paintings meant for no one to buy, black, private, nightmarish things, among them a giant god devouring one of his own children. He never titled them; we call them the Black Paintings. He did not even take them with him when, near 80 and out of sympathy with the Spanish crown, he left the country for Bordeaux in France, where he died. The murals were peeled off the walls decades later and hang now in Madrid.
Works
305 works
Prison InteriorFrancisco Goya, 1815
Saint BarbaraFrancisco Goya, 1773
San Bernardino of Siena preaching before Alfonso V of AragonFrancisco Goya, 1781
Self-PortraitFrancisco Goya, 1815
SummerFrancisco Goya, 1787
The Boar HuntFrancisco Goya, 1775
The Countess del Carpio, Marquesa de La SolanaFrancisco Goya, 1793
The Crockery VendorFrancisco Goya, 1779
The Duchess of Alba and la BeataFrancisco Goya, 1795
The Game of Horse and RiderFrancisco Goya, 1791
The Junta of the PhilippinesFrancisco Goya, 1815
The KiteFrancisco Goya, 1778
The LetterFrancisco Goya, 1814
The Marquesa de PontejosFrancisco Goya, 1786
The SeesawFrancisco Goya, 1779
The Time and the old womanFrancisco Goya, 1810
Two Old MenFrancisco Goya, 1819
A Fight at the Venta NuevaFrancisco Goya, 1777
A Village BullfightFrancisco Goya, 1815
Bernardo de IriarteFrancisco Goya, 1797
Boys picking fruitFrancisco Goya, 1778
Card PlayersFrancisco Goya, 1777
Charles IV on HorsebackFrancisco Goya, 1800
Children with a CartFrancisco Goya, 1779
Dance of the Majos at the Banks of ManzanaresFrancisco Goya, 1776