Insanity
Display of Goya Prints Featured at the NLM Thirteen prints by Francisco Goya (1746-1828) , a Spanish painter who stands among the first modern artists, are on display at the National Library of Medicine. Although Goya held a position as court painter to Spain's King Charles IV, he often mocked the powerful in his paintings and satirized Spain's government and church. His depictions of hospital patients, torture chambers, the poor, and people in complex psychological states, transformed the unmentionable into fit subjects for art. Two of the works are first editions created by Goya, while the others are "restrikes" printed by others using Goya's original plates.
Arts | Arts & Humanities | English | Francisco Goya | Hospital | Image | Insanity | Maryland | Poverty | Spain | Spanish art | Torture | U.S. National Library of Medicine | United States | Visual arts | Fine Arts | Psychology, Linguistics & Cognitive Science | Health & Medicine | Social Sciences
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