The National Gallery (London)
Goya: The Portraits
7 October 2015 – 10 January 2016
This landmark exhibition will bring to The National Gallery in London more than 60 of Goya’s most outstanding portraits from both public and private collections around the world. These include works that are rarely lent, and some which have never been exhibited publicly before, having remained in possession of the descendants of the sitters. The exhibition will show the variety of media Goya used for his portraits; from life-size paintings on canvas, to the miniatures on copper and his fine black and red chalk drawings. Organised chronologically and thematically, we will for the first time be able to engage with Goya’s technical, stylistic, and psychological development as a portraitist.
This exhibition constitutes the best possible survey of portraits by one of the most profound and incisive painters who ever put brush to canvas. Goya’s gaze pierces through outward appearances and reveals human frailty and fortitude, folly and wisdom. Gabriele Finaldi, National Gallery Director.
From São Paulo to New York, and Mexico to Stockholm, private and institutional lenders have been outstandingly generous, including 10 exceptional loans from the Museo del Prado, Madrid. One of the stars of the show will undoubtedly be the iconic ‘Duchess of Alba’ (The Hispanic Society of America Museum & Library) (pictured), which has only once left the United States and has never travelled to Britain. Painted in 1797, this portrait of Goya’s close friend and patron shows the Duchess dressed as a ‘maja’, in a black costume and ‘mantilla’ pointing imperiously at the ground where the words ‘Solo Goya’ (‘Only Goya’) are inscribed.
Other patrons who assisted Goya on his upward trajectory to become First Court Painter, as Velázquez had done more than 150 years before him, are well represented: these include ‘The Count of Floridablanca’ (Banco de España, Madrid) and ‘The Duke and Duchess of Osuna and their Children’ (Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid) – both key and influential patrons. The immense group portrait of ‘The Family of the Infante Don Luis de Borbón’ (Magnani-Rocca Foundation, Parma), will be reunited with some of the other portraits Goya painted of the Infante’s young family who were living in exile from the Spanish court.
Other highlights will include the charismatic portrait of ‘Don Valentin Bellvís de Moncada y Pizarro’ (Fondo Cultural Villar Mir, Madrid) which is unpublished and has never been seen before in public, and the rarely exhibited ‘Countess-Duchess Benavente’ (Private Collection, Spain). The recently conserved 1798 portrait of Government official ‘Francisco de Saavedra’ (Courtauld Gallery, London) will be exhibited for the first time in more than 50 years alongside its pendant painted in the same year, showing his friend and colleague ‘Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos’ (Museo del Prado, Madrid).
‘The Countess of Altamira and her daughter, María Agustina’, which has never been lent internationally from the Lehman Collection at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, will come to Europe for the very first time to be reunited with her husband ‘The Count of Altamira’ (Banco de España, Madrid) and their son ‘Manuel Osorio Manrique de Zuñiga’ (The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), wearing a fashionably expensive red costume and playing with a pet magpie (which holds the painter’s calling card in its beak). It was shortly after completing his imposing portrait of the Countess, wearing a shimmering embroidered silk gown and shown with an introspective expression, that Goya was appointed court painter to Charles IV, King of Spain.
It was in his royal portraits in particular that Goya managed to combine his insightful observation and technical refinement to create unique, memorable portraits; in these he condensed the various aspects of his sitter’s personality into a subtle look or gesture, which often did not flatter his sitters. ‘Charles III in Hunting Dress’ (Duquesa del Arco) stands in a pose directly inspired by Velázquez’s hunting portraits of the Spanish royal family in the previous century, but the candid portrayal of a weather-beaten face with its marked wrinkles and a somewhat ironic gesture is unique to Goya, clearly revealing to us the personality of the King – an enlightened man, a lover of nature and his people, who wished to be approached as ‘Charles before King’. Similarly, in the portrait of ‘Ferdinand VII’ (Museo del Prado, Madrid) we can imagine Goya’s mistrust of the pompous and selfish monarch who abolished the constitution and reintroduced the Spanish Inquisition.
In contrast to the formality of his royal portraits, the exhibition also features more personal works by Goya, including a number of self-portraits in different media, and depictions of his friends and family.47 years lie between the first ‘Self Portrait’ (about 1773, Museo Goya, Colección Ibercaja, Zaragoza) in the show, completed when Goya was in his late 20s, and the last, the poignant ‘Self Portrait with Doctor Arrieta’ (1820, The Minneapolis Institute of Art) painted after an illness from which he almost died when he was 74 years old. There will also be a chance to ‘meet’ the people who were closest to Goya; his wife ‘Josefa Bayeu’ (Abelló Collection, Madrid), his son ‘Javier Goya’ (Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Private Collection; Museo de Bellas Artes, Zaragoza) and his best friend and life-long correspondent ‘Martin Zapater’ (Bilboko Art Eder Museoa / Museo de Bellas Artes de Bilbao). The exhibition also includes the last work Goya ever painted, of his only, beloved grandson ‘Mariano Goya’ (Meadows Museum, SMU, Dallas) – painted just months before Goya’s death on 16 April, 1828, this portrait is a testament to the genius, skill, and unfaltering creativity of an artist who persevered with his craft to his very last days.
National Gallery Director, Gabriele Finaldi said: “This exhibition constitutes the best possible survey of portraits by one of the most profound and incisive painters who ever put brush to canvas. Goya’s gaze pierces through outward appearances and reveals human frailty and fortitude, folly and wisdom.”
Garrett Curran, CEO of Credit Suisse in the United Kingdom said: “We are delighted to support the National Gallery’s ‘Goya: The Portraits’, which will be the first exhibition to focus solely on Goya’s work as a portraitist and will give visitors a rare opportunity to witness the significant changes that took place in European political and social history as well as its key protagonists during Goya’s long life.”
Image above: Detail from Francisco de Goya, ‘The Duchess of Alba’, 1797 © Courtesy of The Hispanic Society of America, New York.
All info from: www.nationalgallery.org.uk/whats-on/exhibitions/goya-portraits
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Goya: The Portraits
The National Gallery London / Sainsbury Wing Exhibition
Daily: 10am – 6pm
Fridays: 10am – 9pm