Francisco de Goya y Lucientes
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Francisco de Goya y Lucientes

La Tauromaquia (D. 224-56; H. 204-36)

Details
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes
La Tauromaquia (D. 224-56; H. 204-36)
the complete set of 33 etchings with burnished aquatint, drypoint and engraving, 1816, First Edition, very good, early impressions, on laid paper, plate 23 with a Serra watermark, plate 24 with a No. Io. watermark, the other sheets without watermarks but similar in weight and structure to Serra, together with the explanatory text (watermark Bartolome Mongelos), published by the artist, Madrid, pale scattered foxing, trimmed irregularly (occasionally on or just inside the platemark), mounted on guards, bound in late 19th-/early 20th-century half red morocco over marbled boards, spine titled in gilt, top edge gilt, with slipcase. (album)
P. 245 x 350 mm., S. 260 x 370 mm. (average)
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No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

In the Tauromaquia, created and assembled between 1814 and 1816, Goya focused his attention on the drama of the bullfight. The series begins with illustrations of the origins and history of bullfighting and ends with the extraordinary acrobatic feats of Martincho, famous for his daring stunts, one of which involved him vaulting from a table over a bull with his feet shackled. Goya treats this event with his typically innovative style, relying less on etching and more on beautifully modulated aquatint to create remarkable spatial and formal effects. It is only in early impressions, such as the present lot, that the full effect of this aquatint is apparent. Whilst the subjects vary, consistent throughout the entire series is his almost painterly style which is especially evident in his use of shading. As Sanchez and Gallego point out, the Tauromaquia shows '...…a masterly ability to portray movement, to capture the tense excitement and muscular vitality of the corrida, and this with an unerring sense of when to play with chiaroscuro effects, in the Baroque manner, to suggest the tragedy and cruelty that accompany the fateful encounter of man and beast.'
A. Sanchez and J. Gallego, Goya: The Complete Etchings and Lithographs, New York, 1995.

To a certain extent, through the violent combat of man and beast, Goya transposes his feelings toward the Franco-Spanish War whose atrocities he had condemned so vividly in his Desastres de la Guerra only shortly before. Yet Goya, in his 70th year at the time of the Tauromaquia's publication, had been an aficionado since his youth and in the series also manages to recapture his youthful vitality and love of life.

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