P.E.’s Reviews > Goya > Status Update

P.E.
P.E. is on page 168 of 288
'The Disasters of War were a first-hand report of violent and cruel political events immortalized by Goya. 80 sheets show the atrocities he had witnessed or heard about. These definitely do not glorify the struggle or take any one side, but instead present the suffering of the victims, something without precedent in the previous history of art.'
Mar 14, 2026 07:27AM
Goya

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P.E.’s Previous Updates

P.E.
P.E. is on page 204 of 288
'In 18th-century Spain, etching was rarely done as art and was used more to illustrate books or topographical works. But Goya made it the medium of modernity.'
Mar 14, 2026 07:39AM
Goya


P.E.
P.E. is on page 114 of 288
After Napoleon abdicated, Ferdinand VII restored the Bourbon monarchy and began to persecute the liberals. War, famine and epidemics threw the country into a serious crisis.'

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Mar 14, 2026 07:04AM
Goya


P.E.
P.E. is on page 114 of 288
'After Charles IV abdicated and went into exile in France, he transferred his rights to Napoleon. French troops tried to enforce Napoleon's claim to power and found themselves in fierce battles with the people of Spain. In Madrid alone, 20,000 people were killed within one year. The French were unable to put down the uprising.

[1]
Mar 14, 2026 07:03AM
Goya


P.E.
P.E. is on page 96 of 288
'In the 1790, Goya travelled repeatedly across southern Spain. He extended his 1792 trip an additional year due to a serious illness which caused Goya to lose his hearing. This was the period in which Goya created the Caprichos, which show a closeness to the liberal spirit of Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos.'
Mar 14, 2026 06:48AM
Goya


P.E.
P.E. is on page 48 of 288
'In 1784, Goya painted the first portrait of the [Spanish] royal family to also show the painter. He also showed the servants, another innovation.'
Mar 14, 2026 06:08AM
Goya


P.E.
P.E. is on page 4 of 288
'His entire work tend to look both ways, showing styles ranging from classic academic art to what would become Modernism, with tender and playful Rococo and classical elegance to rugged realism and dark Romanticism.'
Mar 14, 2026 05:33AM
Goya


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