Goya – NGV - a podcast by JOY 94.9 - LGBTI, LGBTIQA+, LGBTQIA+, LGBT, LGBTQ, LGB, Gay, Lesbian, Trans, Intersex, Queer Podcasts for all our Rainbow Communities

from 2021-06-21T10:22:25

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The world-exclusive exhibition Goya: Drawings from the Prado

Museum features more than 160 works on paper by Francisco

Goya (1746 – 1828), celebrating the artist’s extraordinary

draughtsmanship and imagination. Considered to be one of the

first truly modern artists, Goya produced humorous and critical

images of Spanish society that comment on gender relationships,

social inequality and violence, as well as visions of fantastic

creatures.

Goya: Drawings from the Prado Museum is the first major

presentation of Goya’s work at the NGV in more than 20 years

and features 44 drawings on loan from the Prado Museum, the

largest group of Goya’s drawings ever seen in Australia.

Ranging from bold ink drawings to delicate red chalk sketches,

the drawings on display have been selected by the Prado

especially for this NGV presentation. Highlights include examples

from the artist’s earliest albums of social satires, preparatory

drawings for his iconic print series, through to pages from the late

albums, which contain some of Goya’s most complex and surreal

images. This rich and diverse selection of drawings showcases

the breadth of Goya’s drawing practice, as well as offering a rare

insight into the artist’s image-making process.

Following a near-fatal illness in 1792, which left him profoundly deaf, Goya turned to drawing to record his

private thoughts, visions and dreams, and continued this practice until the end of his life. In eight private

albums, as well as in single sheet drawings, he gave expression to a vision of humanity that had no

equivalent in the art of his day. Highlight works include This is how useful men usually end up 1814-23, a

moving commentary on the consequences of poverty and war, and Literate animal 1824-28, a satirical

image of an educated animal, which Goya drew in the last years of his life.

The works drawn from the Prado collection will be complemented by more than 120 etchings from Goya’s

renowned print series: the Caprichos 1797-98, which satirised vices and follies in Spanish society; The

Disasters of War 1810–15, based on the atrocities of the war and famine that followed the Napoleonic

invasion of Spain in 1808; Tauromaquia 1815-16 on the subject of bullfighting; and the enigmatic

Disparates c. 1815–19, made during the reign of Ferdinand VII, whose suppression of civil liberties affected

the lives of many intellectuals and reformers, including Goya and his friends. The prints are drawn from the

NGV Collection with fifteen works on loan from the Art Gallery of South Australia. Goya’s most famous

etching, The sleep of reason produces monsters, a striking composition of the sleeping artist haunted by

monstrous apparitions, is also featured in the exhibition.

The exhibition is structured chronologically and thematically around recurring themes in Goya’s art, many of

which are as relevant today as they were in Goya’s time: the relationship between men and women; the

condemnation of ignorance and religious zeal; the exploration of violence and its consequences; and the

device of the nightmare or dream to critique social and political realities.

Tony Ellwood AM, Director of the National Gallery of Victoria, said: ‘All aspects of society came under

Goya’s critical eye – from education and marriage, to social justice and power relationships. Audiences to

this exhibition will be astonished by the contemporary relevance of this exhibition and the universal themes

that underpin the works of this celebrated Spanish artist.’














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