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Goya: A Life in Letters

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Goya: A Life in Letters

Contributors:

By (Author) Sarah Symmons

ISBN:

9781845951818

Publisher:

Vintage Publishing

Imprint:

Pimlico

Publication Date:

5th July 2011

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Individual artists, art monographs
History of art
Paintings and painting
Diaries, letters and journals

Dewey:

759.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

336

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 23mm

Weight:

457g

Description

Entertaining, tragic, comical, obscene and surprising - these are the letters of the major eighteenth century Spanish painter, Francisco Goya. Goya was born in 1746. By the time he was 47 he was the highest paid and most famous artist in Spain, had gone profoundly deaf and six of his seven children had died. He worked for three Spanish monarchs, the duke of Wellington, the Spanish aristocracy and intelligentsia, and for Napoleon's brother. One Spanish prince called him 'the painting monkey', contemporary critics called him 'the philosopher painter'. His friends called him Paco, and 'Our Dear Goya'. A local newspaper referred to one of his portraits as bringing honour to the whole Spanish nation. He learned to lip-read and speak in sign language; he painted with his fingers, a palette knife and with the pointed end of his paintbrush; he invented engraving techniques which are still in use by modern artists; his 'Nude Maja', 'The Third of May' and 'Saturn devouring his son' are ranked among the most powerful and mysterious paintings in the history of European art. From an early age Goya was anxious to preserve a record of his life, but few of his writings have survived and his most personal records appear in his letters. He corresponded regularly with the aristocracy and the monarchy, as well as with friends. Goya's surviving letters reveal a highly emotional man, prepared to state his feelings as passionately to the authorities of a Cathedral as to a close friend. His letters make few concessions and are literary works in their own right. Uniquely individual, they signal a new attitude on the part of a fine artist towards his profession, his social position and his sources of inspiration. These writings look forward to the great artistic testaments of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries- Delacroix's Diary, the letters of Van Gogh and Dali's Diary of a Genius. From this new collection of letters, many translated into English for the first time, Goya emerges as witty, passionate and unexpectedly vulnerable.

Author Bio

Sarah Symmons has written extensively on the painting and sculpture of the 18th and 19th centuries. Her previous publications include Flaxman and Europe, Goya in Pursuit of Patronage, Goya, Art and Ideas and Printing the Unprintable. She is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Essex, and has established an international reputation as an authority on Goya and his contemporaries.

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