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FRANCISCO GOYA Y LUCIENTES

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His wife died in 1812 but it took him six years after the tragic events of May 2 and 3 1808 to paint some of his most celebrated works (Dos and Tres de Mayo) in 1814.

His situation at the court remained unchanged but he started to face the hostility of reactionary circles. Feeling isolated, he bought a house in Carabanchel, near Madrid, called the “Quinta del Sordo” (The farm of the deaf).

His situation at the court however soon became unbearable as he was constantly held as a suspect to such a point that King Ferdinand had him interrogated by the Inquisition while many liberals were being persecuted.

In 1823, he requested to go on leave to Bordeaux and despite his age he went to Paris where he met some Spanish exiles. Totally deaf and being a complete stranger to the French language, he limited himself to visiting monuments, fairs and circuses and returned to Bordeaux after a short stay in Madrid.

Goya died in Bordeaux and his remains were ultimately transferred to Madrid, where his tomb is now in the middle of the Ermita of San Antonio de la Florida, which he had himself decorated.

What made Goya a great master was his ability to develop his style throughout his career and not to remain a talented painter confined in a limited spectrum. He certainly learned from Mengs and Bayeu but rapidly showed his concern for daily life and the sufferings of the Spanish people thus switching from academic painting to reality, like did Caravaggio and Rembrandt before him.

His severe illness suffered in 1792 marked a complete change in his life and conduct and made him exhale his real genius. Observing was his motto while his hallucinations led him to produce his most striking works. All the more, his production was rather phenomenal and his portraits often were pitiless, the funny fact about that being that his sitters, notably Queen Maria-Luisa, were somewhat enchanted by their renderings. In these portraits, Goya proved to be a magician in distracting the eye of the spectator with the addition of some artefacts on the canvas, such as sumptuous clothes and fittings that counterbalanced the rather tough and stupid looks of his sitters.

Goya once said he had three masters, “Nature, Velasquez and Rembrandt” and pinpointed that colours did not exist in nature but only shadow and light. He also stressed that only a painting rendering intention was considered as finished.

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