Description: This edition was made by Rupérez in the Calcografía Nacional for the Ministerio de Instrucción Pública in 1937, during the Spanish Civil War.Plate measures: 21,4x15,1 cms.Sheet measures: 38x28,5 cms.The present engraving has the number 19 on the back. The engraving has a embossed stamp with the initials 'CN' surrounded by a border which reads: Calcografia Nacional Ministerio de Instrucción Pública.Five sets, numbered 1-5 were dedicated to Stalin, Mrs. Eleanor Rooselvet, and for the Republican President Azaña, President of the Republic, leaving two sets unaccounted for. Fifteen series numbered 6-20, on Imperial Japan paper were also issued. It appears that shortly after the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War, all Goya´s copperplates were going to be sent to Paris with a view to printing an edition there. The work was finally undertaken in the Calcografía. One of the first series issued in 1937 was gifted by the Spanish Embassy in London to the Victorian and Albert Museum, where it was exhibited. Thomas Harris states that this edition is a very well printed.Condition: In good condition. It has some litttle rust spots, 1 or 2 of them affect the image as can be seen in the pictures.The image of front cover of the etching series has been added as additional description for this engraving but it is not part of this sale.'Si quebró el cantaro' (Plate 25 Los Caprichos). Print related to Capricho 3 (Que viene el Coco). Goya addresses the pernicious system of educating children through violence. The label of the print contains the ironic intention of the author, highlighting the absurdity of the punishment and the fury of the mother in view of the insignificance of the child's fault. Goya emphasizes the violence of the mother's face and the terror of the child's countenance, evidencing the disproportion between punishment and fault. On the other hand, authors such as J. Adhémar or P. Lefort, believe that this picture refers to the violent disputes that took place between Queen María Luisa and the infant, later Fernando VII, during the last years of the reign of Carlos IV , all this due to the violent aversion that the infant felt for Godoy.Los Caprichos are above all a satire conceived as a means to combat the vices of men and the absurdities of human behavior. Simplifying the series, we can group the prints around four major themes, all of them undoubtedly critical in tone. In the first of them, he addresses deception in relationships between man and woman: courtship as a common practice according to which modern man, busy with his various businesses, allowed his wife to be accompanied on his outings by a leading man; prostitution that denigrated and exploited the condition of both sexes; and unequal marriages or marriages of convenience, a common practice of his time and criticized by the enlightened. The satire of bad education and ignorance, the result of enlightened concern about this issue, is reflected in the Caprices that show the consequences of wrong teachings in children; false beliefs and superstitions produced by ignorance; and witchcraft as the supreme manifestation of lack of education and superstition. The condemnation of the vices rooted in society, and particularly in the clergy, also have a place: vanity, gluttony, laziness, lust or greed are shown to us in a caustic way in another group of prints. Finally, other Caprichos reveal their protest against the abuses of power: the Inquisition, the arrogance of the ruling classes, the exploitation of the people and the injustices of the law.
Price: 685 USD
Location: Madrid
End Time: 2025-01-26T12:06:34.000Z
Shipping Cost: 20 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 60 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Francisco de Goya y Lucientes
Type: Print
Year of Production: 1937
Size: Small
Material: Ink, Paper, Aquatint, Etching, Engraving, Drypoint
Features: Limited Edition, Numbered
Production Technique: Etching
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Subject: The Caprices