Select Language

English (United States)简体中文(中国)EspañolFrench (Fr)Japanese (JP)Russian (CIS)GermanHinduArabicKorean

Sign up for our email newsletter today!

A+L Search

Latest Events

No events

VirtueMart Product Scroller

VirtueMart Shopping Cart

VirtueMart
Your Cart is currently empty.

Beyond Goya’s Ghosts

This fall, filmmaker Milos Forman brings Goya’s Ghosts to the big screen, taking the extraordinary historical and personal circumstances surrounding the life of vaunted Spanish master Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes and imagining the kind of events that could have shaped the artist, his work and his changing outlook on the world in which he found himself. Art and Living’s Andy Johnson took a stroll through the galleries of Madrid’s Museo del Prado— which house one of the world’s most extensive collections of the artist’s works—in order to sort out the real Goya: his life, his passions and, most of all, his art. Here’s what he discovered.

During his lifetime, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (born in a small Aragonese village, Fuendetodos in 1746) went from being one of eighteenth and nine- teenth century Spain’s most popular portraitists to a widely-revered progenitor of modern art. Despite his position as a commissioned portraitist for the wealthy and the noble during his career— both before and after being officially named as painter to the king Carlos IV in 1786—flashes of Goya’s individuality and his tendency to break with the conventions of the artistic strictures of his time can be seen again and again in the broad spread of his oeuvre showing permanently throughout the Museo del Prado. The artist’s darker work, produced after he reached middle age, would become a key inspiration for later movements like Expressionism and Surrealism.

Of Goya’s life, one thing is certain: he lived in trying times. In late eighteenth century Spain, the fanaticism of the Spanish Inquisition was subsuming the forward-thinking ideas of the Enlightenment that had been so fuelling intellectual life throughout Europe at the time; hate, suspicion and ignominy within the more conservative sections of the elite began to grow.

A direct indication of these harrowing times comes from Goya’s famous etching, ¡Lo que puede un sastre!, 1797-98 (What a Tailor Can Do!) from his Caprichos series, displayed on the second floor of the Prado.What appears to be a monk towers over a young woman on her knees. However, on closer exami- nation, the towering oppressor is simply a tree draped with a habit. The image suggests the essential emptiness of the ecclesiastical tyranny at this time but also hints at the power of its outward symbolism alone. The message seems to be: dress up anything as a powerful figure and the innocent will kneel before it.

In this etching, we can see where writer Jean-Claude Carrière may have found inspiration for the plot of Goya’s Ghosts, which follows the events surrounding the reinstated Inquisition’s persecution of Goya’s young muse Ines (played by Natalie Portman) for heresy despite Goya’s (Stellan Skarsgård) pleas to friend and Inquisition spearheader Brother Lorenzo (played by Javier Bardem).

Goya is believed to have suffered something of anervousbreakdownbetween1792and1793,when a mental and physical deterioration nearly killed him and caused him to go deaf. Another debilitating illness struck him in 1819, bringing him close to death for a second time.The title and the disturbing content of another of Goya’s etchings from this tortured period also on show on the second floor of the Prado, 1797- 98’s El sueño de razon produce monstruos (The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters), suggests the forces plaguing the ar tist’s beleaguered mind.

Salas 36-38 on the first floor of the Prado are home to Goya’s Pinturas Negras (Black Paintings), transferred to canvas from the walls of the artist’s Quinta del Sordo (“The country house of the deaf man”) residence near Madrid, where he lived between 1820 and 1823. In these works, Goya broke from almost every Rococo and Neoclassical influence when he painted over landscapes—origi- nally intended as pleasant and pastoral scenes to decorate the walls of his home—with images that draw from mythology and legend and reflect the depravity, violence and war that surrounded him.

Great He-Goat (or Witches Sabbath), which occupied the whole of the lower left wall of Goya’s quinta, depicts a dark maelstrom of a terrifying pagan ritual in broad, expressionistic strokes. Mouths of witches and watching figures hang open grotesquely in a manner that, like so many of Goya’s Black Paintings and etchings, was largely anathema in painting at the time, certainly in portraiture. The animalistic nature of the human organism is conveyed by the open mouth, as opposed to the the proper, austere rictus of pursed lips required in traditional renderings of the time.

His The Dog is devoid of landscape and renders the poignant and enigmatic image of a solitary dog staring up and out of the frame as if helpless, caught in the tide of some unknown force.The largely abstract image is ahead of its own time, to say the least. Catalan surrealist Joan Miró asked to be shown The Dog and Velázquez’s Las Meninas on his last visit to the Prado before his death. He gave both paintings equal weight by spending the same amount of time in front of each.

Goya left a civil war-torn Spain in 1824 after being tried by the Inquisition for obscenity for his painting of the salacious La Maja Desnuda, 1797 – 1800. He was largely ostracised from exalt- ed Spanish social circles (which were his bread and butter) and, as a result, subsequently withdrew himself from public life.

Goya died on April 16th, 1828 in Bordeaux at the age of 82. His ashes were buried in the chapel of San Antonio de la Florida, Madrid.

Image: Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes, The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters (Capricho 43), 1797-98. Etching and aquatint, Madrid, Museo del Prado.

A & L Highlights

Chef: Conny Andersson 23 April 2006, 16.00 Chefs & Wine Makers
Chef: Conny Andersson
Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel, a Four Seasons Property Chef Conny Andersson strolls through the Regent Beverly Wilshire’s THEBlvd restaurant, a fair distance from his less-than-illustrious beginning as a 16-year-old, t
Read More 1467 Hits 0 Ratings
George Yepes 01 November 2009, 16.00 Artists
George Yepes
  George Yepes was born in Tijuana, Mexico and raised on the tough streets of East Los Angeles, where he overcame ten years spent in one of the area’s toughest gangs to become, in the words of the New Times LA, “the c
Read More 422 Hits 0 Ratings
Ada et al.:A half-century of Alex Katz 16 April 2007, 16.00 Curators
Ada et al.:A half-century of Alex Katz
As his latest museum show comes to a close, New York master Alex Katz muses on his success and reveals his new technique “I had no idea if they would be any good or if people would understand them,” confesses Alex Ka
Read More 2169 Hits 0 Ratings
Elizabeth A. Sackler 01 November 2009, 16.00 Philanthropist
Elizabeth A. Sackler
&g For an institution once considered “establishment,” the current exhibit Burning Down the House is more than merely metaphor. Here at the Brooklyn Museum, wall space is finally repatriated.
Read More 2004 Hits 0 Ratings
Portraits of the New York School 09 August 2010, 14.51 Artists
Portraits of the New York School
For a number of years in the middle of the last century, Dan Budnik captured on film the seminal figures of the NewYork art scene: Johns, Rauschenberg, and numerous others.Today his images serve as historical treasures, r
Read More 544 Hits 0 Ratings
Signature Winston 09 July 2008, 16.00 Designers
Signature Winston
Jeweler Harry Winston spent a lifetime devoted to creating fine jewelry. Today, his company carries on his artistic legacy. The art of Harry Winston’s designs is part creative innovation and part legend.The son of a Ne
Read More 444 Hits 0 Ratings
Jeff Koons: On Track 15 June 2007, 16.00 Artists
Jeff Koons: On Track
Balloon dogs made from stainless steel; basketballs floating in aquariums; a sculpture of Michael Jackson holding Bubbles, his identically- dressed pet ape; close-up depictions of a photogenic couple making love; a train
Read More 501 Hits 0 Ratings
Art 20, Modernism, Outsider Art Fair, Works on Paper, New York Antiquarian Book Fair
Sanford Smith, Founder Sanford Smith has been a force in the art fair world for some time, but inspiration came even sooner—at a flea market in Chelsea where he ran a stall.  It was there that he developed an appetite
Read More 623 Hits 0 Ratings
Website Designed and Maintained by: Ben Giroux Design
Get Started at: BenGirouxDesign.com