"The Witches' Sabbath" is a painting by Spanish artist Francisco de Goya, created in the late 18th or early 19th century. The painting depicts a scene of witches gathering for a Sabbath, a ritual or celebration associated with witchcraft and the devil. In the painting, Goya has created a sinister and ominous atmosphere, with the figures of the witches depicted in dark, shadowy tones against a night sky. The composition is crowded and chaotic, with the witches arranged in a jumbled mass, as if caught in the midst of a frenzied celebration. The use of light and color is also striking, with the bright, ghostly light of the moon illuminating the scene and casting deep shadows. The painting is notable for its eerie and disturbing content, as it reflects the fear and superstition surrounding witchcraft and the devil in Goya's time. Through his depiction of the witches' Sabbath, Goya sought to convey a sense of horror and to challenge viewers' preconceptions about the supernatural. Print: A premium quality heavyweight (200gsm) fine art print material with a smooth, clean finish. This museum quality paper is extremely consistent and works perfectly with large, full colour graphics or illustrations. The matte finish emphasizes different highlights and tones in the source artworks; helping to create stunning works of art. - All prints include a small 0.25 inch white border to ensure space for framing. Our Eco Credentials Include: FSC approved or sustainably sourced paper Printed using water based inks Local fulfilment reduces carbon emissions Contains no plastic Prints: 8” x 12” Inches = 20.3 cm x 30.5 cm 12’’ x 18’’ Inches = 30.5 cm x 45.7 cm
In the life of the great Francisco Goya, there was a period when he became a recluse. The bright master of the Romantic era fenced off the world and created his “Black Paintings”, fourteen frescoes that Goya painted on the walls of his own house. He depicted “Saturn Devouring His Son” in his dining room. […]
An etching from a series of satires made by painter Francisco Goya. It shows Goya having fallen asleep at his work station, plagued in a nightmare by owls and bats. The painting will activate when the user falls asleep while working. It will cause repeated night terrors that will constantly awaken the person out of fear. They will become extremely tired but unable to fall asleep and will dread work. They will also become more disgruntled and become annoyed with all winged animals.
Goya’s bleak visions were originally painted onto the walls of his house – and remain some of the most disturbing artworks ever made
This macabre masterpiece of a mural is one of Francisco Goya's "Black Paintings."
Francisco Goya & Asensio Julià : The Colossus (1812) Canvas Gallery Wrapped Giclee Wall Art Print (D6050) Types: ➤Archival Paper Print (rolled) ➤Canvas Print, Gallery wrapped (mirrored edges) on 2cm depth pine wooden frame (stretched), rolled in a tube, or framed (wood floater frame). Options: ➤Archival Paper Print (rolled) ➤Rolled Canvas Print ➤Stretched and Ready to Hang 1 Panel Canvas Print ➤Stretched and Ready to Hang 3 Panel Canvas Print ➤Canvas in Black, Brown or White Wood Floating Frame (2'' | 5cm thick) ★★★WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A ROLLED CANVAS PRINT AND AN ARCHIVAL PAPER PRINT? ★★★ Whereas our canvas prints come with that typical characteristic texture own to canvas, our archival paper prints come on cotton rag paper without texture. A rolled canvas print is normally stretched on wood stretcher bars, whereas archival paper prints are not. Additionally, a stretched canvas can be framed, but it doesn't need to be. Thus, our rolled canvas prints come in their advertized size + mirrored edges by default for easy stretching. Prefer a cut to size rolled canvas print instead, because you want to frame it in a traditional fine art frame behind glass? Then just type ''cut to size'' in our personalization box (listing top right ''add your personalization''). Note that our rolled canvas prints do not come with stretcher bars or frames. Either take it to your local framer, or stretch/frame it yourself. Other sizes than listed in our drop-down menu available upon request! Have something in mind that you don't see in our shop? Anything at all? We've got your back! Here you can order anything you'd like: https://www.etsy.com/listing/1528183805 Our high quality images are environmentally friendly printed on museum grade canvas, with high quality inks that will last for over 200 years. Our canvas prints are odorless and stable to UV-radiation. Please note that our standard processing time is 3-5 days. Our actual canvases may slightly differ from the pictures shown, as every item that we sell is created especially for you. Our canvas prints actually look BETTER in real life. Please note: all watermarks shown will not be seen on the actual product. **All images and advertized text courtesy of VNTGARTGallery. Text and photos may not be used without written permission.**
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes [1746-1828] © Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado high resolution picture
Francisco Jos de Goya y Lucientes ( faniskoxoseeoailujentes 30 March 1746 16 April 1828) was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker. He is considered the most important Spanish artist of late 18th and early 19th centuries and throughout his long career was a commentator and
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes [1746-1828] © Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado high resolution picture
The Drawings of Francisco Goya Francisco Goya (Spanish,1746-1828) Madness - Three Album Drawings The Idiot, Album H.60, 1825-28 Actual Size: 7.5 x 5.85 inches, Black Chalk This one has lots of relatives and some of them rational. - Album C.52, 1808-14 Actual Size: 8.2 x 5.5 inches, India Ink Wash Raging Lunatic (Loco furioso), Album G.40, 1825-28 Actual Size – 7.2 x 5.7 inches, Black Chalk Three Fine Art Reproductions Full Size Reproductions These reproductions are new, individually printed and proofed, superior quality, giclee* process, fine art prints. They are printed on 100% cotton rag acid-free, heavyweight fine art paper with a luxurious textured watercolor paper finish and archival pigment inks to ensure permanence. Created for collectors, they ARE NOT mass produced prints on low quality, inexpensive paper. Goya’s drawings often portrayed people who were not considered appropriate subjects in other venues: prostitutes, criminals, prisoners, the insane and deformed at the lower spectrum of society. Drawing his subjects either naturalistically or acting out his imaginary macabre fantasies, his work delivers an unapologetic commentary on Spanish society and the bleak everyday existence of the unfortunate classes – those oppressed by the church, aristocracy and royal court. Goya responded to events during his lifetime as an imaginative artist. His lasting progressive effect has been to turn the artist's imagination towards the mass of oppressed society, not in a strictly realistic fashion, and not uncritically, but in a poetic manner that enables his drawings to live and breathe some two hundred years after they were executed. Today his insights are still surprisingly fresh. Goya's albums attest to the depth of the influence of the Enlightenment on the direction of his work its individuality and originality in images that are of lasting universal appeal. Francisco Goya (1746-1848) the famous Spanish court painter turned increasingly to drawing as his primary means of artistic expression after 1795. He filled over eight albums of approximately 600 drawings and published four major print cycles of etchings depicting a society in transition. With pitiless observation he captured an unstable and restless Spain – a Spain suffering from religious Inquisition, a corrupt deluded aristocracy, social injustice, violent crime and the atrocities of a guerilla war against Napoleon’s invasion of 1808. Drawn with a pessimistic and cynical yet truthful eye, his subject matter dealt with the realities of everyday life, fables, witchcraft, the church, social injustices and the disasters of war. Goya’s art invented a new type of art; art as visual reportage that virtually anticipated photojournalism and recorded a beleaguered society at the advent of the 19th century. Original Medium: Black Chalk and India Ink Wash on paper. Reproductions: Fine Art Paper, Pigment inks Image Sizes: all at actual sizes - printed on larger paper to allow ample borders for matting and framing Prints ship a protective heavy cardboard mailing tube. **the giclee process produces a high quality, fine art reproduction from a high-resolution digital file of an image. The file is then printed with a high-resolution photo generation printer on a fine art paper. Most artists and working photographers today use the giclee process to produce reproductions of their original artwork and photographs. As with any original art or fine art reproduction, it is recommended that prints are framed and displayed under glass to prevent color fade or shift over the years.
The subject of this canvas can be identified from the inscription that was previously on the reverse and which read “El célebre ciego fijo” [The famous l...
Our Giclees are Printed and Shipped in USA from an Owner-Operated company that has been in business since 1978 so purchase with confidence that you are buying from an experienced seller. All Posters and Canvases will be Shipped Rolled in a heavy tube. High Quality Matte Paper Stock and High Quality Canvas Material used for your purchase. The size selected will be the size of the Image. However, the paper/canvas the image is printed on will be larger to accommodate a mat for the Posters on Matte Paper or to be stretched for Images on Canvas. Kindly understand, colors may vary depending on your monitor settings. ******************************************** FAF1109
Francisco de Goya The Witches’ Kitchen, 1797-98
“Brigand Murdering a Woman, 1800 https://t.co/Xs6Luq6fu5 #goya #romanticism”
Goya’s bleak visions were originally painted onto the walls of his house – and remain some of the most disturbing artworks ever made
Francisco GOYA (1746-1828) Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker. He is considered the most important Span
Together with Picasso, Miró, and Velázquez, Francisco de Goya is one of the most important painters in Spain. While all of these painters have a special place
“There are two ways, perhaps, of looking at Francisco Goya,” writes Colm Tóibín in the Review’s December 18, 2014 issue. In the first version, Goya, who was born near Zaragoza in 1746 and died in exile in France in 1828, “was almost innocent, a serious and ambitious artist interested in mortality and beauty, but also playful and mischievous, until politics and history darkened his imagination.... In the second version, it is as though a war was going on within Goya’s psyche from the very start.... His imagination was ripe for horror.” Here we present a series of prints and paintings from the show under review—the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s “Goya: Order and Disorder,” now closed—along with commentary on the images drawn from Tóibín's piece.
Francisco Goya was recognised from a very early age as the leading artist in Spain, rising to become the official portraitist of the Spanish Court.
“The Strolling Players, 1793 #franciscogoya #romanticism”
“There are two ways, perhaps, of looking at Francisco Goya,” writes Colm Tóibín in the Review’s December 18, 2014 issue. In the first version, Goya, who was born near Zaragoza in 1746 and died in exile in France in 1828, “was almost innocent, a serious and ambitious artist interested in mortality and beauty, but also playful and mischievous, until politics and history darkened his imagination.... In the second version, it is as though a war was going on within Goya’s psyche from the very start.... His imagination was ripe for horror.” Here we present a series of prints and paintings from the show under review—the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston’s “Goya: Order and Disorder,” now closed—along with commentary on the images drawn from Tóibín's piece.
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes [1746-1828] © Madrid, Museo Nacional del Prado high resolution picture
Spine-tingling works by Goya, Van Gogh, and more.
Goya has a unique position in the history of western art, representing the first truly modern artist. His art embodiesContinue reading