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Great Masters

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FRANCISCO GOYA Y LUCIENTES

Cet article se compose de 7 pages.
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Despite his close relationship with the court, Goya could not prevent himself from defending the cause of the French revolution but what caused his sudden disgrace was his insatiable appetite for women. After seducing some ladies of the court he was thus forced to leave Madrid during a year.

After staying at a friend's house in Cadiz, Goya was on his way back to the Spanish capital in 1792 when he suffered several fits of faintness that made him lose his balance and endure a series of physical disorders. Beside having hallucinations he became deaf and almost mad.

Forced to return to Cadiz, he thought he would die but finally recovered though he remained deaf for good.

His terrifying deafness then led him to live in a different world and to meditate about his existence. After depicting the joys of life, he suddenly expressed his sufferings caused by his hallucinations.

In 1793, he started what he called “cabinet” paintings, in which he gave a priority to observation, a factor left aside in his previous works. Freeing himself from all conventional commandments, he painted extraordinary pieces relating to bull-fights, madness, burials and the Inquisition. At the same time, his style became more vigorous and more expressive while he adopted a sombre palette.

His caustic style blossomed in his etchings produced from 1796, notably in his “Capriccios”, in which he denounced the stupidity and the vices of his time. After ridiculing the Inquisition, he again faced problems but managed to offer his series of etchings for the collection of the King in exchange for an annual grant in favour of his son Xavier.

In 1794, he painted the “Triana”, a famous singer, a work that enhanced his success as a master. Between 1793 and 1797 he painted portraits with silver-grey tones brilliantly executed, such as that of Francisco Bayeu in 1795, the year his brother-in-law died.

In this work the fiery looks of Bayeu as well as his sufferings were sensed to the utmost by Goya. The same year, he painted the portrait of the Duchess of Alba before a landscape, shown with neutral tones in order to enhance the beauty of this woman wearing a vaporous grey-white dress heightenedby the red colours of her necklace and belt.

It seems that Goya showed more than a pictorial interest for the Duchess who was also attracted by him. His deafness was perhaps one of the factors for such interest as this woman had expressed the wish to debase herself to expiate some fault. She also protected all sorts of handicapped people and following the death of her husband in 1796, she went to Andalusia, where Goya probably joined her.

Their suspected love affair later led art critics to make suggestions that she was the model for his legendary paintings of the “Maja desnuda” and the “Maja vestida”, but such relationship did not last long.

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