Archived Pages from 20th Century!!
de Zurgena, Madrid, Spain
Academia de San Fernando,
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Francisco Goya, considered to be "the Father of Modern Art,"
began his painting career just after the late Baroque period. In expressing
his thoughts and feelings frankly, as he did, he became the pioneer of
new artistic tendencies which were to come to fruition in the 19th century.
Two trends dominated the art of his contradictory; they actually were not.
Together they represented the reaction against previous conceptions of
art and the desire for a new form of expression. In order to understand
the scope of Goya's art, and to appreciate the principles which governed
his development and tremendous versatility, it is essential to realise
that his work extended over a period of more than 60 years, for he continued
to draw and paint until his 82nd year.
The importance of this factor is evident between his attitude towards life in his youth, when he accepted the world as it was quite happily, in his manhood when he began to criticise it, and in his old age when he became embittered and disillusioned with people and society. Furthermore, the world changed completely during his lifetime. The society, in which he had achieved a great success disappeared during the Napoleonic war. Long before the end of the 18th century Goya had already turned towards his new ideals and expressed them in his graphic art and in his paintings. As an artist, Goya was by temperament far removed from the classicals. In a few works he approached Classical style, but in the greater part of his work the Romantic triumphed. Born in Zaragoza, Spain, he found employment as a young teenager under the mediocre artist Jos� Luz�n, from whom he learned to draw and as was customary, copied prints of several masters. At the age of 17 he went to Madrid. His style was influenced by two painters who were working there. The last of the great Venetian painters�Tiepolo and the rather cold and efficient neo-classical painter�Antonio Raphael Mengs. In 1763 he entered a competition at the Royal Academy of San Fernando, and failed, as he did in the year 1766. In 1770, he want to Rome and survived by living off his works of art. |