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Goya
Graveur
Petit Palais, Musée des Beaux-Arts de la Ville de Paris
13 March, 200813 June 2008 |
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Almost thirty years after the
Petit Palais hosted its first exhibition of Goya's prints, this
newly renovated museum outdid itself with one of the most captivating
shows in Paris during the spring and summer season. The unusually
long lines that trailed from its entrance are quite commonplace
across the street at the Grand Palais, where the Marie Antoinette
exhibit was on display, but most visitors often skip this smaller
museum all together. For Goya Graveur however, both tourists
and the intellectual elite came in droves to see not only the works
of art, but also their clever and unusual installation (figs. 1,
2). Curated by Maryline Assante di Panzello, Simon Andre-Duconchat
and Juliet Wilson-Bareau, the use of striking colors such as red
brick, dark brown, golden yellow and soft blue, taken from the
artists’ color palette in his famous painting “Los
Fusilamientos del 3 de Mayo” (The Shootings of May 3rd 1808)
is more audacious here than in other recent Parisian exhibits and
makes for a more rewarding visual experience. The well-known
provenance of the pieces also plays a valuable role in attracting
visitors as the majority of the prints in the exhibition are from
two of the most famous French print collections: the frères
Dutuit (Eugène, 1807-1886 and Auguste, 1812-1902) and the
legendary fashion millionaire, Jacques Doucet (1853-1929). |
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Simon
Andre-Duconchat, a Ph.D. candidate in art history at the Sorbonne
University and one of the main forces behind the conception and
creation of the show, pointed out that these two collections have
never before been combined. In the 1980s exhibition, Gravures
de Goya de la collection Dutuit, the museum focused on its
own collection, based primarily on the donation made by the Dutuit
brothers who had given an extremely rare first edition of the Tauromaquia series,
plus a number of trial proofs, to the Ville de Paris in 1902. Combining
these works with Los Desastres de la Guerra et Los Disparates from
the Doucet collection, now at the Institut nationale d’histoire
de l’art, and a rare series of Los Caprichos from
the Bibliothèque nationale, proved to be an innovative approach,
enabling the curators to select a much larger presentation of works
than ever before, totaling more than 200 prints. |
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For Andre-Duconchat, one of the
crucial elements to be noted is the difference in the collectors’ perception
of the artist’s work. For Eugène and Auguste Dutuit,
Goya's prints were purchased as the chronological conclusion to
their collection of eighteenth-century art, whereas Jacques Doucet
saw them as a bridge between traditional art and the modern era;
when he decided to sell his collection of classic art in order
to direct his energy towards the avant garde in 1912, he kept Goya's
prints as part of his Cabinet d’estampes modernes of around
10,000 works. With these two complementary collections of Goya's
prints, it seemed a natural idea to house the exhibit in the Petit
Palais, which was originally built in 1900 for the Exposition Universelle,
and was at one time designated to house an official Print Museum.
Various collectors participated in donating a variety of works
to create a foundation that would offer visitors a comprehensive
history of printmaking. The museum opened its doors to the public
in 1908, and unfortunately did not survive as an independent entity,
but the donations have remained in the museum's holdings ever since. |
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For this particular exhibit at
the Petit Palais, Goya was presented as an artist of la lumière, referring
to his use of light, but also to his role as an artist of the Enlightenment.
This was an original concept since it was one way of contextualizing
the artist and his work while simultaneously attempting to explain
how his use of light was symbolically linked to the period in which
he was creating. The timing of the exhibit also coincides with
the bicentenary of Napoleon’s invasion of Spain and the dramatic
events that led the Spanish people into war, as well as the 200th
anniversary of Goya's two monumental paintings from May 1808, both
of which have now been cleaned and restored. This particular reference
was emphasized in the installation through the partial reconstruction
of The Massacre of the People in 1808, painted in 1814,
which further gave rise to his series of prints, The Disasters
of War, which were exhibited in the gallery adjacent to this
reconstruction. In the most carefully developed ways, the organizers
of the show continually tried to reveal how the prints and social
history were interrelated. |
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Maîtres
Before heading into the darkness of Spain's history and Goya's most
famous series, the first rooms of the exhibit were dedicated
to his formation as an artist, with Rembrandt, Velazquez and
nature as his three main sources of inspiration. In one
of the first rooms, a variety of prints by Rembrandt were placed
next to some of Goya’s early prints. The bold tonal contrasts
in Rembrandt’s Descent from the Cross (1654) call
to mind Goya’s use of light and dark, an aspect of his
work that may date back to his visits with his friends Ceán
Bermudez and Sebastián Martinez, both of whom collected
Rembrandt’s prints, although Goya himself owned ten etchings
by the artist. |
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His first dated print, done at
the age of 30, was Exodus to Egypt (1774), which demonstrates
quite a traditional and linear treatment, similar to that found
in Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo’s work. The two artists became
friends when G. D. Tiepolo’s father, Giambattista Tiepolo,
worked at the court of King Charles III. Soon after, Goya would
begin to use more cross-hatching in his work, so that by 1780,
in his Portrait de St Francois de Paule, one of his first
large-scale works, we can see the development of his technique. |
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The Velasquez series, Goya’s
first series to be published for sale, emphasized the way that
he used his intense study of an earlier master to his own advantage
which proved to be quite a challenge for the young printmaker (fig.
3). This monumental undertaking would enable him to forge his artistic
education in a self-guided fashion. One of the most interesting
pieces of this series is Las Meninas, dated between 1778-1785
(fig. 4). Although his goal was to create an aquatint, he allowed
the plate to sit in the acid for a prolonged period of time, ruining
the plate. The trial proof on display in the current exhibit is
extremely rare, one of the few printed before the aquatint was
applied. |
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Los Caprichos
After this brief introduction to Goya’s beginning stages as
a printmaker, and then his own turn as a painter at the King’s
court in 1789, the next room was dedicated to one of his most well-known
achievements, Los Caprichos, 1789. Amid social unrest
in Spain, the artist embarked on his legendary path as a social commentator,
denouncing the undermining of democratic freedoms by favoritism and
corruption. In this series of images, he broke with traditional subject
matter and united the fantasy world of Piranesi and Giambattista
Tiepolotwo artists whose work he collectedwith a combination
of dream-like figures to demonstrate all that was wrong with Spanish
society. His targets included popular witchcraft, prostitution, abortion,
the Inquisition, the corruption of the clergy, the coquetry of the
nobility and the decadence of the Spanish monarchy Mucho hay que
chupar, (There is a lot to suck) (fig. 5). Finally, in
his emblematic image of the monsters brought on by sleep, or unawareness, El
sueno de la razón produce monstrous (The Sleep of Reason Produces
Monsters) we discover his call to fellow compatriots to remain
awake and alert to the degradation of society. |
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Fearing punishment from the government,
Goya retracted the series only days after he offered it for sale.
Ironically, Manuel Godoy, the Spanish prime minister who took over
after Charles IV abdicated the throne, had his own personal copy
of Los Caprichos bound in exceptional red leather. This
rare copy, from the first edition and now in the collection of
the Institut nationale d’histoire de l’art, is on display
in a glass case in the center of the room (fig. 3). The series
of prints on the wall belonged to Vivant Denon, Ministre des arts
under Napoleon and was acquired by the Bibliothèque nationale
in 1827. |
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L’Atelier
An innovative look at how Goya may have worked, the ‘Studio’ gallery
offers the viewer a didactic approach to the actual process and techniques
of printmaking. With a detailed account of how a lithograph and an
etching are made, the visitor was shown the tools used in producing
such a work, starting with the original drawing, followed by its
mirror image etched onto a copper plate. Also on display are three
famous instructional treatises on printmaking that Goya may have
used: by Abraham Bosse (1701), Manuel de Rueda (1761) and Joey Senefelder
(1819). These are featured next to an original eighteenth-century
wood printing press in the corner, on loan from a Parisian printer. |
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On the adjacent wall were a series
of images showing the various stages of creation for Estan calientes
(They are hot), the popular image of gluttonous monks from Los
Caprichos. Beginning with the original preparatory drawing,
followed by a red ink drawing which was used to position the aquatint,
we then see the image transferred onto the copper plate, this particular
one having been steel-plated in order to prolong the quality of
its impression. Then there were two states of the etching: first
with the aquatint added, but before the burnishing has been done,
bearing the inscription “estan calientes” in the lower
margin; second the final version of the etching with aquatint and
burnishing and the title in the margin. The unusual display of
each step of printmaking enabled the viewer to better understand
the process of Goya’s technique. |
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The use of magnifying glasses,
placed on top of the cases to help view the artist’s work,
proved to be problematic on opening night when some visitors left
them directly focused on the etchings. Shortly afterwards, a guard
was placed nearby to displace the glasses so that light would not
damage the prints. |
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| Fig.
6. Los Desastres de la Guerra, plate 4: Y no hai
remedio, 1810-1811. Etching, dry point and burin. L’Institut
nationale d’histoire de l’art: Doucet Collection.
Photography: Petit Palais |
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| Fig.
7. Installation of Los Desastres de la Guerre, Petit
Palais. Photography: Simon André-Deconchat & Petit
Palais |
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| Fig.
8. Installation shot of La Tauromaquia, Petit Palais.
Photography: Simon André-Deconchat & Petit Palais |
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| Fig.
9. La Tauromaquia, plate 21,1815- 1816. Etching, drypoint,
aquating, burin and brunissoir. Petit Palais, Dutuit Collection.
Photography: Petit Palais |
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| Fig.
10. La Tauromaquia, plate 6, 1816. Etching and drypoint.
Petit Palais, Dutuit Collection. Photography: Petit Palais |
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| Fig.
11. Los Disparates, plate 4: Disparate de niais, 1815-1824.
First edition, 1864. Epreuve d'état with etching, aquatint
and retouched with crayon. Collection: Petit Palais, Dutuit
Collection |
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| Fig. 12. Diversion de Espagna,
1825. Lithograph with crayon. L’Institut national d’histoire
de l’art, Doucet Collection |
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Tres de Mayo and Los Desastres de la Guerra
Linking the main rooms to the next gallery was a large reproduction
of Tres de Mayo, painted in 1814. Its placement here reminds
the visitor of the end of the Spanish War in 1814, an evocation
of the time period in which Goya created his 82 haunting plates
of Los Desastres de la Guerre. Because these images
were profoundly disturbing and controversial, they were not edited
during the artist’s lifetime. The horrors of the
war in Spain come to life in every image, inspired by events
that Goya himself witnessed: executions, hangings and other forms
of torture. What makes these personal recollections all the more
riveting is his technique of mixing etching, dry point and aquatint
as in Con razon ó sin ella, (With or without
reason). |
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As a sign of his dedication to his art and
his denunciation of the atrocities of the war, Goya sacrificed
two large copper plates and cut them into four smaller plates around
1810, during a difficult time when he was not able to purchase
new copper on a regular basis. In the first state of Y no hai
remedio, (There is no remedy) Goya uses etching
and dry point to evoke the darkness of the execution scene in which
Spanish resistance fighters are bound and blindfolded, and then
killed (fig. 6). But what was most effective in this section
of the exhibition was the installation. Within a huge space, Los
Desastres de la Guerre was positioned on the walls all around
the room, with the central space of the gallery reserved for a
circular bench where visitors could observein silencethe entire
sequence of prints. This evocative installation became a memorial
to the dead, a silent witness to the unending disaster that is
war (fig. 7). |
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La Tauromaquia
In the next gallery two black and red curved benches, suggesting
the ring of a bullfight, offered a welcome resting spot where
weary visitors could admire the series of 33 plates of La Tauramaquia,
which depicts the history of bullfighting, (fig. 8). Published
in 1816, the artist began by developing the contemporary scenes
first, portraying popular bullfighters like Mariano Ceballos,
Pepe Hillo, and Pedro Romero; then subsequently creating historical
images of the Moors attacking bulls in the countryside (fig.
9). He also shows us the origins of banderoles in Origen de
los arpones ó banerillas. The presentation of La
Tauromaqui, from the Petit Palais' collection, was one of
the most unusual in that a number of proofs were mounted in double-sided
glass, suspended as if in a glass case in front of the final
states, which were hung on the wall above (fig. 10). |
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Los Disparates (Proverbes)
Perhaps some of the most haunting images by Goya are from Los
Disparates, one of the last series of etchings made by the artist
before he began to experiment with lithography. Made between 1815
and 1824, the 22 plates were not published during his lifetime, possibly
due to his concern about the censorship laws. Then, at the death
of his son, Javier, in 1854, they were discovered in his home, known
as the Quinta del sordo, the “house of the deaf”, referring
to Goya’s loss of hearing due to his severe illness in 1792.
For many, the Proverbes are seen as a synthesis of Goya’s
work, a mix of styles, techniques and subject matter, mixing bulls
outside the arena with mysterious and frightening images such as Disparate
de niais (fig. 11). The print on display, from a private collection,
was an unusual trial proof with etching, aquatint and retouched with
crayon. |
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Lithography and Goya’s Move to France
Although Goya began his forays into lithography in Madrid when the
new art form arrived in 1819, only about ten of his lithographs
were published there. Most of them were first made available
in France, where Goya spent the last years of his life. After
leaving Madrid for Bordeaux in 1824, he started to explore the
possibilities of the new technique and at some point befriended
Cyprien-Charles Gaulon, who became his mentor. One of the most
intriguing images from this work is Diversion de Espagna,
an 1825 lithograph with crayon from the Institut nationale d’histoire
de l’art (fig. 12). Here Goya uses some of the technical
achievements of etching in a lithograph, suggesting new ways
this medium could be adapted by a creative artist. |
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Upon Goya's death in 1828, the artist was
revered for his originality and his imagination, leaving a lasting
impression on the romantic artists of the nineteenth century; this
theme was explored in the last rooms of the exhibit. From Delacroix’s
figures for Faust to Meissonier's lithograph entitled Nightmare for Le
Charivari in 1834, both artists clearly derived their
inspiration from Los Caprichos. Also of interest are the
various copies by Achilles Devéria, in his series of lithographs
from 1824, and Maurice Sand in his drawings from 1838. Goya's
work was also admired by artists from the latter half of the nineteenth
century, as seen in Félix Buhot's haunting frontispieces for l'Illustration
nouvelle (1877) and Zigzags d'un curieux (1888) as well
as Odilon Redon'seerie Hommage à Goya (1885) and Variations,
Démon guettant (1907). There can be little doubt that
later generations of printmakers, when they had the opportunity
to see and understand Goya’s prints, were able to find ideas
that they could use in their own work. None did this better than
Edouard Manet, whose etchings not only rely on Goya’s strategies
for positioning figures in unusual spatial relationships, but also
contributed to the strong cult of French Espagnolisme that emphasized
Goya’s art as one of its central fascinations. |
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The large scale of Goya Graveur and
its exemplary installation made it one of the most educational
exhibits in Paris; its audacious focus on printmaking alone also
made it one of the most relevant. Avid print collectors and art
historians alike can attest that there is a discrepancy in the
importance of prints to paintings in the exhibition programs of
most museums. Hopefully the overwhelming success of this show among
all age groups will lead to others like it in the near future.
To those who were fortunate to see the actual installation, this
exhibition will remain a model for how to make prints accessible
to the public, and demonstrate the importance of historical context
in understanding the work. |
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Sabina Fogle
with Gabriel P. Weisberg and
Janet Whitmore
sabinafogle[at]aol.com |
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© 20089 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Sabina Fogle. All Rights Reserved. |
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