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GOYA by Janis Tomlinson Kirkus Star

GOYA

A Portrait of the Artist

by Janis Tomlinson

Pub Date: Sept. 15th, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-691-19204-8
Publisher: Princeton Univ.

A fresh examination of one of the most significant artists in Spanish history.

Francisco Goya (1746-1828) began his studies in Zaragoza before moving to Madrid in 1775, where he would spend nearly 50 years as court painter for successive monarchs. In 1824, Goya retired to France, where he spent the last four years of his life. Many works about Goya’s life fail to fully explore how his art was shaped by family, friends, and travel. But as Tomlinson explains, recent discoveries, including a sketchbook used by the artist in Italy and in the years following his return to Spain, “justify a new consideration of Goya’s life.” The author, who has written widely on her subject, contends that his formative years in Zaragoza are often overlooked as a prologue to his later career. Zaragoza was a “source of memories and inspiration for his works,” including images invoking the “sacred and profane, reality and fantasy” that he witnessed in local celebrations. Furthermore, “Goya’s early familiarity” with patients in a mental hospital likely “aroused both compassion and mirth” and “might explain his deeply sympathetic representations of the insane in drawings executed many years later.” While other scholars view the onset of deafness as a downturn in Goya’s life, Tomlinson argues that his craft actually “blossomed in experimental works during the years to follow.” The author contends that the true turning point likely occurred a decade later, in 1803, following the death of a dear friend and decline of royal patronage. “Having witnessed the exile of patrons once powerful and political alliances come and gone…Goya now looked to his family and to patrons beyond the court, working to ensure his personal and professional legacy in an increasingly unstable world.” Tomlinson’s meticulous distillation of a voluminous number of parish records, drawings, notes, and letters is impressive, and her knowledge of and passion for Goya continually shine through in her writing, making for a fascinating and insightful reading experience.

A top-notch biography.