The Boar Hunt
The Boar Hunt | |
---|---|
Artist | Francisco Goya |
Year | 1775 |
Medium | oil on canvas |
Dimensions | 249 cm × 173 cm (98 in × 68 in) |
Location | Palacio Real de Madrid, Madrid |
The Boar Hunt (Spanish: La caza del jabalí) is a painting of 1775 by Francisco Goya and the earliest surviving tapestry cartoon by the artist. It depicts men with dogs and boar spears killing a boar.
The painting belongs to Goya's first series of cartoons, intended for a series of tapestries on hunting themes for Charles, Prince of Asturias and Maria Luisa of Parma. The tapestry was to be hung at the royal palace of El Escorial. Its authorship is confirmed by its dimensions in receipts for the tapestries from the archives of the Royal Tapestry Factory.
Goya's work was supervised by his brother in law Francisco Bayeu and Francisco's brother Ramón. Francesco delivered this and four other cartoons to the weaver Cornelio Vandergroten on 24 May 1775.[1]
See also
References
- ^ GASSIER, Pierre; Juliet Wilson Bareau (1974). Vida y obra de Francisco Goya. Barcelona: Juventud. ISBN 84-261-5682-7.
External links
- Media related to The Boar Hunt (Goya) at Wikimedia Commons
- v
- t
- e
Los Caprichos (1797–98) | |
---|---|
The Prisoners (1810–1815) | |
The Disasters of War (1810–1820) |
|
La Tauromaquia (1815–16) | |
Los Disparates (1815–1823) |
|
The Bulls of Bordeaux (1824–25) |
- The Naked Maja (1958 film)
- Goya, a Story of Solitude (1971 film)
- Goya or the Hard Way to Enlightenment (1971 film)
- Goya: A Life in Song (1989 album)
- Goya in Bordeaux (1999 film)
- Volavérunt (1999 film)
- Goya's Ghosts (2006 film)
- The Ministry of Time – Episode 25: Time of the Enlightened (2017)