La belle et les hommes masqués (La Route d'Andalousie)

Francisco Goya · PD

La belle et les hommes masqués (La Route d'Andalousie)


Détails

Année
1777
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
275 × 190 cm

L'histoire

This is not a finished picture in the usual sense but a cartoon, a full-size painted model that weavers at the royal tapestry works copied thread by thread. Goya delivered it in August 1777 for a set meant to hang in the dining room of the Prince and Princess of Asturias at El Pardo, outside Madrid. He was in his early thirties, still building a court reputation. The scene is set on a road in Andalusia. A young woman in Spanish dress stands between men in cloaks, and the story is jealousy. One masked man squares up to a seated man who has flirted with her, while she urges the pair to move along. Goya listed the couple in his bill to the manufactory as gypsies.

La belle et les hommes masqués (La Route d'Andalousie) — Francisco Goya — MuseScope