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Goya: Order & Disorder - (Hardcover)

Goya: Order & Disorder - (Hardcover)
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Last Price: 47.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Catalog of an exhibition held at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, October 12, 2014-January 19, 2015.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Francisco Goya has been widely celebrated as the most important Spanish artist of the late-eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the last of the old masters and the first of the moderns, and an astute observer of the human condition in all its complexity. The many-layered and shifting meanings of his work have made him one of the most studied artists in the world. Few, however, have made the ambitious attempt to explore his work as a painter, printmaker and draftsman across media and the timeline of his life. This book does just that, presenting a comprehensive and integrated view of Goya's most important paintings, prints, and drawings through the themes and imagery that continually challenged or preoccupied the artist. They reveal how he strove relentlessly to understand and describe human behavior and emotional states, even at their most orderly or disorderly extremes, in elegant and incisive portraits, dramatic and monumental history paintings, and series of prints and drawings of a satirical, disturbing and surreal nature. Derived from the research for the largest Goya art exhibition in North America in a quarter-century, this book takes a fresh look at one of the greatest artists in history by examining the fertile territory between the two poles that defined the range of his boundlessly creative personality. <p/><b>Francisco José Goya y Lucientes</b> (1746-1828) was born in Fuendetodos, Aragón, in the northeast of Spain. Goya was court painter to the Spanish Crown, and famously documented the Peninsular War (1807-1814) between France and Spain in his harrowing <i>Disasters of War</i> series. An important bridge to the modernist era, Goya's oeuvre provided a crucial precedent for artists such as Manet, Picasso and Francis Bacon.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>Goya: Order & Disorder automatically invites comparisons with Goya and the Spirit of Enlightenment, a volume produced a quarter century ago, when MFA Boston last presented a major Goya exhibition. The new book's title suggests a historical approach to its subject-like the earlier volume's-reflecting the massive changes in Spain and Europe during Goya's lifetime. Instead, it delivers a thematic, historically untethered account of Goya's achievement, making it hard to grasp how a young, savvy striver-many of whose commissioned works of the 1770s and early 1780s are underwhelming-evolved into the artist who created the bitingly satirical Caprichos in the late 1790s, who responded to Spain's brutal guerrilla war against French invaders with some of the most indelible images in Western art, and whose late work foreshadows, in the words of Fred Licht, the "modern temper in art." Goya and the Spirit of Enlightenment presents Goya's oeuvre in three chronological segments that segregate prints and drawings, which are uniquely important in Goya's oeuvre. The effect is to show the artist's transformation from a creature of the Age of Reason into a harbinger of our darker time. But the present book, organized thematically, scrambles the chronology of Goya's career, so that works with quite different audiences and aims (noble portrait versus piercing social critique) appear cheek by jowl. Gathered under the theme "Hunting" are anodyne early tapestry cartoons; an unintentionally comic print copying a royal portrait by Velázquez, whose subject poses as a hunter; and, from Los Caprichos, the print All Will Fall, in which bird men, lured by a beautiful harpy, are ensnared and tortured by women with evident relish, an image that crosses the line between moralizing allegory and penetrating psychology.--Christopher Lyon "Bookforum"<br>

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