Goya and Redon
Francisco Goya was an 18th-19th century Spanish painter and printmaker. Odilon Redon was a 19th-20th century painter and printmaker. The two artists, though separated by a century, share a similar style and perspective. Goya lived through the Romantic-Enlightenment era and saw the unraveling of society on the Continent as the Old World values were swept away be Enlightenment philosophy and Romantic dreams. Redon lived to reflect the aftermath of that era: his symbolist paintings show a world that is half-mad, yet totally focused on itself and its grandiose ideas. Together, Goya and Redon cover three centuries of thought and activity in Europe. Goya’s Saturn Devouring His Son (1819-1823) and Redon’s The Smiling Spider (1887) both show strangeness in the extreme and depict a frightening aspect of the world that is at once nightmarish and bizarrely humorous. This paper will provide an analysis of Goya’s and Redon’s respective works.
Goya’s Saturn Devouring His Son shows Saturn, the Roman god, who ate his children because he feared they would overthrow him. It is a cruel and grisly subject, but one that Goya felt reflected the world in which he lived where so much fighting, violence, and bloodshed was overwhelming Europe. The Protestant Revolution had led to wars (Laux); the French Revolution had led to wars (Holsti); Napoleon had invaded country after country, and the Spanish Inquisition was trying to root...
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