Ensayos from Los Caprichos
About this artwork
As a printmaker Goya created personal and often controversial images, far removed from his official commissions for the Spanish Court. The print series Los Caprichos is a set of eighty satirical images. The grainy tone has been achieved using a powdered rosin (called aquatint) applied in a fine layer on selected areas of the metal etching plate. The plate is immersed in acid, which bites around the rosin to create a roughened surface. Goya’s use of aquatint is considered the most accomplished by any historical artist.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Francisco de GoyaSpanish (1746 - 1828)
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title:Ensayos from Los Caprichos
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date created:1799
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materials:Aquatint and Etching on paper
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measurements:Platemark: 22.1 x 16.6 cm support: 26 x 19.3 cm
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object type:
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credit line:The Henry and Sula Walton collection: bequeathed 2012
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accession number:P 3145.22
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gallery:
Francisco de Goya
Francisco de Goya
Goya, born in Fuendetodos, Zaragoza, Spain, was an original and enigmatic artist, equally gifted as a painter and printmaker. His appointment in 1786 as painter to the Spanish King Charles IV followed a period in Madrid where he had moved from the north east of Spain. Goya's reputation was built on...