The beginnings in Saragossa; Goya in Madrid; new patrons, new projects; between commission and caprice; "Los Caprichos"; painting in the spotlight; imagery of atrocity; the artist in his studio; the Quinta del sordo; the Bordeaux years; Goya after Goya.
Winner of the Eleanor Tufts Award from the American Association of Hispanic Art Studies, 1996.
Janis Tomlinson is a noted authority on Spanish painting, and has taught at Columbia University, New York, and Williams College, Massachusetts.
"This is the best monograph on Goya yet written... The text is accessible, questioning and elegant."—Times Literary Supplement "[Janis Tomlinson] provides one of the most balanced and readable introductions to any painter... This book is a pleasure to use and fundamental to all Goya studies."—Country Life "Beyond being a clear-eyed, historically alert reading of Goya's art, Tomlinson's book is full and dazzling record of it."—San Francisco Chronicle
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