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Studio: international art — 24.1902

DOI Heft:
No. 105 (December, 1901)
DOI Artikel:
Bensusan, S. L.: A note upon the paintings of Francisco José Goya
DOI Seite / Zitierlink:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.19874#0172

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Goya

and the result is La Aquadora, which belonged from politics and remained an artist, he realised
to the late Senor Castelar. Youth, sport, fashion, every detail of the life that passed before his eyes,
country grace have complete control over his His portraits of General Urrutia, and of that strong
brush while he is dealing with them, and though Admiral Mazarredo who defied Napoleon, sum up for
Goya the painter is at the back of them all, he us the people on whom Spain might have depended
subdues his own personality and brings it within so largely; his Joseph Buonaparte shows us why
proper limits. His pictures are a vivid repre- Napoleon's Spanish plans collapsed, his Charles IV.
sentation of what he has seen and felt, not an tells us how they came to be possible. If Goya
impression coloured by an unvarying mood that hated " Ferdinand the Desired," what greater
limited the range of vision. Some artists see a punishment was possible than the picture hanging
little and see it accurately, others extend their in the San Fernando Academy, where every trace
vision at the cost of its accuracy, but Goya at of the man's worthlessness stands revealed. In
some periods of his life was able to receive any short, the artist saw the period of strife as truly
impression. as he had seen the period of peace, and amid the

His moods were constantly changing. If he was clamour of rival factions he worked steadily on

happy, life showed itself in guise of rarest beauty, canvas, copper, and stone, even painted for the

or, to write more correctly,

he saw only the beautiful

side of life. I believe that

the period wherein every-
thing was couleicr de rose

was the season of his liaison

with the young and beauti-
ful Duchess of Alba. She

was the greatest lady and

he the greatest painter of

the Spanish Court. Their

affection was faced by many

difficulties, and in those

days to fight was as

pleasant as to paint. He

triumphed over the

troubles, broke away from

the Countess Benaveute,

and followed the lady of

his choice into her exile at

San Lucar. In the happy

days when he was young

and popular, with all the

money and patronage he

needed, Goya saw life as

Watteau saw it ; the light

colour groupings of certain

scenes are conveyed in a

manner that brings back a

Spain that has lain for a

century dead.

Revolution came, the

flag of the Republicfluttered

across the Pyrenees, and

flaunted above the Puerta del

Sol. Goya felt the intensity

of the strife that was around „ LA AQUAD0RA -

him. Though he held aloof (From the Collection of the late Senor Castelar)

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