The series Los Caprichos is probably Goya's best known. Comprising
eighty plates, Goya privately published the series, which was first advertised
for sale in the Spanish newspaper Diario de Madrid in 1799 as being
a criticism of "human errors and vices," although the subjects
are often obscure and interpretation purposely difficult. Lampooning both
political and religious figures, Goya soon found it diplomatic to present
the original plates to the king for his Calcografia, in exchange
for a pension for his son.
The Sleep of Reason is a self-portrait of the artist, surrounded
by demonic-looking animals. It was intended as the frontispiece for the
series, but Goya soon thought better of this, probably because the subject
related too closely to two plates in Rousseau's 1793 Paris edition of Philosophie
at a time when the very name of Rousseau was anathema to religious and political
leaders in Spain. Instead, Goya created another, more traditional, self-portrait
as the frontispiece and buried The Sleep of Reason well within the
series, as plate 43.
In Los Caprichos Goya begins to push the boundaries of the intaglio
process to achieve a sense of ambiguous space coupled with a modernist sensibility.
This series grew out of Goya's developing sense of isolation, the result
of a protracted illness he suffered in 179293, leaving him totally
deaf. This, along with his difficult position as court painter to King Carlos
IV at a time when he was becoming increasingly dedicated to the cause of
the Spanish peasants, left him feeling compromised. Relying on a variety
of influences, Los Caprichos served as a coded expression of the
artist's growing involvement in Madrid's political milieu.
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FRANCISCO JOSE DE GOYA
Y LUCIENTES
Spanish, 1746-1828
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
(El Sueño de la Razon Produce Monstruos), Plate 43 of
Los Caprichos, second edition, ca. 1803
Etching and aquatint. 7 1/8 x 4 3/4 in. (18.1 x 12.2 cm)
Membership Purchase Fund. 63.108 |