Goya kicks against the pricks. His etchings are fierce social critiques of authority: judges, religious figures, aristocrats, and merchants. His satire is aimed at some of the most important institutions of the era, including the Inquisition, the prison system, marriage, and the courts. As always, his etchings are fluid and eye-catching. He reveals delicate detail and stark shades of heavy contrast with equal skill. There is a magnetic beauty to his art, even when portraying the vilest, ugliest, and most horrifying characters or scenes. This is grotesque aesthetics of the highest level -- a book to return to again and again, especially relevant for me as an American living through this era of political buffoonery, social public shaming, and reactionary rhetoric to all expression, especially the arts.