Goya: The Disasters of War
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Author: Goya, Francisco
This clothbound book faithfully reproduces the first edition of Goya's 'The Disasters of War', first published in 1863. The complete set of 80 etchings are exquisitely printing quality on paper that closely resembles the texture of the original engravings, in a similar format and scale. War is still a condition of human existence today – Goya’s etchings are timeless for their vehement denunciation of its atrocities committed by all combatants, regardless of their national affiliations.Following his tenure as court painter for the Spanish royal family, Francisco de Goya’s art took on darker subjects and a more expressive style, especially during the Peninsular War (1808–14). Much can be gleaned from the fraught and visceral work of this period, including his series of etchings known as 'The Disasters of War'. Concerned about the state of the world as much as his own failing health, Goya spent 10 years on what he personally titled 'Fatal Consequences of Spain’s Bloody War with Bonaparte, and Other Emphatic Caprices'. Starvation, sickness, looting, assault, torture, execution—each image confronts the shattered lives of everyday soldiers and civilians, accompanied by brief, ambiguous captions such as “Y no hay remedio” (“And there is no remedy”) and “Yo lo vi” (“This I saw”).Born in Fuendetodos, Spain, Francisco de Goya (1746–1828) trained in Zaragoza and later moved to Madrid. In 1789 he was appointed as a court painter by Charles IV. Considered “the last of the Old Masters and the first of the moderns,” his art blended elements of Romanticism with a deeply personal and often critical vision of society.
ISBN 9788410024632. La Fábrica. hb. 176 pages. 50 colour ills. 24.2 x 31.8 cm.
available
This clothbound book faithfully reproduces the first edition of Goya's 'The Disasters of War', first published in 1863. The complete set of 80 etchings are exquisitely printing quality on paper that closely resembles the texture of the original engravings, in a similar format and scale. War is still a condition of human existence today – Goya’s etchings are timeless for their vehement denunciation of its atrocities committed by all combatants, regardless of their national affiliations.Following his tenure as court painter for the Spanish royal family, Francisco de Goya’s art took on darker subjects and a more expressive style, especially during the Peninsular War (1808–14). Much can be gleaned from the fraught and visceral work of this period, including his series of etchings known as 'The Disasters of War'. Concerned about the state of the world as much as his own failing health, Goya spent 10 years on what he personally titled 'Fatal Consequences of Spain’s Bloody War with Bonaparte, and Other Emphatic Caprices'. Starvation, sickness, looting, assault, torture, execution—each image confronts the shattered lives of everyday soldiers and civilians, accompanied by brief, ambiguous captions such as “Y no hay remedio” (“And there is no remedy”) and “Yo lo vi” (“This I saw”).Born in Fuendetodos, Spain, Francisco de Goya (1746–1828) trained in Zaragoza and later moved to Madrid. In 1789 he was appointed as a court painter by Charles IV. Considered “the last of the Old Masters and the first of the moderns,” his art blended elements of Romanticism with a deeply personal and often critical vision of society.
ISBN 9788410024632. La Fábrica. hb. 176 pages. 50 colour ills. 24.2 x 31.8 cm.
available