Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, "The Third of May 1808" (1814), oil on canvas, 106 x 137 inches, in the collection of the Museo del Prado (image via Wikimedia Commons) The Hispanic Society Museum and ...
Looking ahead to the bicentennial of the death of Francisco Goya (1746–1828), New York’s Hispanic Society Museum and Library is opening a new Goya Research Center dedicated to the Spanish artist in ...
Patrick Lenaghan (R), curator of prints and photographs at the Hispanic Society Museum & Library, speaks during a public ...
Madrid’s Museo del Prado is hosting the debut solo show for German painter and photographer Sigmar Polke in the Spanish capital, 14 years after the artist’s death from cancer. “Affinities Revealed” ...
Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828), known simply as Goya, was driven by a fierce, almost childlike curiosity about human nature and went through several artistic stages. He designed royal ...
The Colossus has always figured as a masterwork among Francisco Goya’s chronicle of human suffering during Spain’s war of independence (1808-1812). But now Madrid’s Prado museum, which long gave it ...
As supreme mirages of dark delight and horror, Goya’s late paintings and etchings were probably inspired by the imagery of gothic novels, which he must have read either in English or French, for the ...
LONDON (Reuters) - Spanish artist Francisco Goya, best known now for depicting the horrors of war, was celebrated in his own time as a great portrait painter for royalty and aristocrats, generals and ...
¡Qué guerrero! (What a Warrior!) is an etching by Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (Spanish, 1746–1828) from his series Los Disparates (The Follies), also known as Proverbios (Proverbs). Goya ...