Goya--the name alone evokes countless masterpieces, both painted and
printed: the raw and brutal "Third of May 1808," the nightmarish
"Caprichos" etchings (with the famous motto, "The sleep of reason
produces monsters"), the compellingly erotic "Nude Maja" and "Clothed
Maja," the savage "Disasters of War" series and, of course, the late
black paintings, with their murky forebodings of public unrest and
private turmoil. Although Goya's influence on his contemporaries was
minimal (eclipsed as he was at the time by artists trained in the
classical style of David and Ingres), it can now be traced clearly from
Manet through Picasso to Surrealism, Polke, the Chapman brothers and on.
Nobody
expressed the ravages of warfare and the extremes of human experience
like Goya; it made him the envy of Picasso, who, as a young artist,
copied his signature over and over, as though to absorb the personality
and abilities of his one supreme influence. And it is perhaps the wildly
imaginative freedoms of Goya's late work that has kept him so
contemporary--that, and the palpable emotion in his brushwork, so full
of impact and sensation. Here, Jose Gudiol, renowned author of essays
and monographs on Velazquez, El Greco and Spanish art, provides a
serious introduction to the massive subject that is Goya.
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