Abstract
Modern critics often regard Goya’s etchings and black paintings as satirical observations on the social and political conditions of the time. In a study of Goya first published in 1950, which seldom receives the attention it merits, the French author and art theorist André Malraux contends that these works have a significance of a much deeper kind. The etchings and black paintings, Malraux argues, represent a fundamental challenge to the European artistic tradition that began with the Renaissance, an essentially humanist tradition founded on the pursuit of a transcendent world of nobility, harmony and beauty-an ideal world outside of which, as Malraux writes, ‘man did not fully merit the name man’. Following the illness that left him deaf for life-an encounter with ‘the irremediable’, to borrow Malraux’s term-Goya developed an art of a fundamentally different kind-an art, Malraux writes, ruled by ‘the unity of the prison house’, which replaced transcendence with a pervasive ‘feeling of dependence’ and from which all trace of humanism has been erased. Foreshadowing modern art’s abandonment of the Renaissance ideal, and created semi-clandestinely, the etchings and black paintings are an early announcement of the death of beauty in Western art.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 965-980 |
| Number of pages | 16 |
| Journal | History of European Ideas |
| Volume | 42 |
| Issue number | 7 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2 Oct 2016 |
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