February 24, 2006
Art Review | 'Goya's Last Works'
Goya, Unflinching, Defied Old Age
By MICHAEL KIMMELMAN

IN 1824, Ferdinand VII, lately freed from prison with French help and
returned
to the Spanish throne, was a vengeful despot. The Inquisition was restored,
liberals were rounded up.

When a temporary amnesty was announced, Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes,
court painter, friend to too many free thinkers, applied to take the
waters at
Plombières, in France.

He headed for Bordeaux, not even bothering to stop at Plombières, then
went on
to Paris, where he spent the summer. He was stone deaf and didn't speak a
word
of French. If he saw Delacroix and Constable in the great Salon of 1824, he
never mentioned it. Delacroix belonged to another generation. In September,
Goya returned to Bordeaux and settled into the expatriate community.

And there he died, at 82, in 1828, attended by his companion, Locadia, a
distant
relative, with whom he reportedly fought all the time, and by her two
children.
The younger one, Rosario, is sometimes thought to have been Goya's daughter
because he said nice things about her art. Goya didn't say many nice things
about other artists.

There have been many Goya shows lately. He's a man for our day, the great,
unflinching satirist of everything irrational and violent and absurd in life
and politics. "Goya's Last Works," at the Frick, differs from the large,
rather
loveless survey that veteran aficionados may remember that the Metropolitan
Museum did some years ago. That exhibition tried to pigeonhole the artist
as a
symbol of Enlightenment values, draining the guts out of Goya. Look at the
late
work and you'll see, as Robert Hughes once nicely put it, that there's no
less
of the Marquis de Sade in him than there is of Rousseau.

The compact Frick show is sublime. An early French biographer, Laurent
Matheron,
writing about Goya during his twilight in exile, blew off the late work as
"feeble and slack." Matheron must have been blind, or saw pictures now lost.
They're certainly not here. I can't recall too many exhibitions on this scale
more revelatory.

The inspiration for it was one of the Frick's own Goyas, a deceptively fine
portrait of a young woman, from 1824, the sort of painting you might miss if
you weren't looking closely. The curators, Jonathan Brown and Susan Grace
Galassi, decided to spotlight it, and the show naturally grew, but not too
much, to include other late works.

It has sometimes been said that the sitter for the Frick portrait is Rosario,
which isn't too likely since she was 36, and the young woman, flushed,
expectant, childishly calm, doesn't look a day over 26. Prim in white gloves
and a black dress trimmed in lace, she is swiftly painted in dashing, creamy
strokes that pay homage to Goya's hero, Velázquez, at the same time that they
bring to mind Manet. He's the automatic association today, Manet having
passed
on to posterity the look of "modern" painting inherited straight from Goya.

For comparison's sake, the curators borrowed other late portraits. Goya
could be
a perfunctory artist, and two clunky portraits of Spaniards in Paris, Joaquín
María de Ferrer and his wife, seem lifeless: diffident commissions. But then
Goya also painted Don Tiburcio Pérez y Cuervo, an architect, shirt sleeves
rolled up, arms folded, smiling slightly, resembling Goya as a young man. The
best portraits have an intimate bond with the sitters.

The strongest bond comes across in the one of his old pal Leandro
Fernández de
Moratín. A poet and playwright, Moratín sat for Goya in the 1790's, when
he was
lean and suave. Now he's puffy and middle aged, his face built up with thick,
puttylike slabs of pigment. He has the tense expression of someone who knows
his portraitist will be brutally honest but who is himself a believer in
truth
and in the artist, and whose forbearance therefore makes him look heroic and
humane. Only the savviest, most mature painter could manage to convey all
that.

But then, more than 30 years earlier, Goya had already sketched a portrait of
himself after a bout with death that cost him his hearing; in it he's
Beethoven
with Medusa's hair, all wary introspection and defiance. That drawing is
in the
show, as a kind of prelude for the self-portrait from 1820, painted after
another illness during which Goya was attended by a friend, a doctor named
Eugenio García Arrieta. In gratitude Goya portrayed them both, as an ex-voto,
inscribed with elaborate thanks. Arrieta supports his ailing patient and
holds
up a glass of medicine. Eyes glazed, head lolling, Goya clutches his
bedsheets
(the gesture speaks volumes) while behind him, as if straight from his
fevered
brain, a noisome coven of figures, like the Fates, lurks in the shadows.

By that point, decades of violence and political calamity along with his own
physical suffering had reinforced in Goya a hermetic, almost hallucinatory
despair — an outlook on the world that, the portraits of his friends aside,
pervaded the late work. Mankind was not inherently good, rational and free,
manacled and corrupted only by tyranny and circumstance. Society was a
surging
mob of lost souls, hysterics and murderers. The most shocking picture in the
show may be a little keepsake that Goya dashed off before quitting Madrid.
It's
of his son, Javier, a wastrel, whom Goya loved anyway. He is drawn as fat and
dissolute, a lost soul staring vacantly. With Goya, truth trumped love. But
life was still worth living to the very last minute, if only for the reason
that Goya scrawled across a sketch of a hunchbacked Methuselah: "I Am Still
Learning."

He was. Nearly 80, he took up lithography in Bordeaux, making prints of
bullfights in the workshop of Cyprien Gaulon — Goya's portrait of whom, all
velvety touch and measured nobility, turns him, like Moratín, into a romantic
hero.

Bullfight scenes didn't appeal to the French, but lithography inspired
Goya to
draw with black crayon, another new medium for him. His Bordeaux drawings
bring
to mind diary entries. He spotted a roller skater, head tossed, on the
verge of
toppling backward, alongside a bicyclist. He saw a woman crammed into a
shoulder carriage, like a giant backpack with a little window, being
lugged by
a stooped porter. And he noticed an amputated beggar, wide-eyed and
slack-jawed, in a huge contraption of a wheelchair that, like a chariot,
enclosed him between its two great front wheels, making a triangle of the
composition.

He also visited a madhouse in Bordeaux and drew a lunatic, a monstrous
figure,
wearing a loose sack, twisting like a Michelangelo slave, his arms behind
him,
his legs buckling, his head a gnarled mass of thatched hair and knotty
bone. A
single, haunted eye swivels into the man's skull. As Mr. Hughes put it in his
Goya biography, the eye was a stroke of genius by "an old man who had
suffered
immensely and known every last terror of black melancholy."

And then there is the imploring penitent on his knees, maybe another of the
madhouse inmates, although his pose, arms raised, is like the famous
patriot's
before the firing squad in "The Third of May."

It's hard not to see him and all the other old men in these late works as
implicit self-portraits. They're fools, donning bat wings, moving herky-jerky
before women invariably more graceful and powerful than they are. A dwarfish
constable clutching a set of keys beseeches a young beauty wearing a giant
padlock. He's a thwarted Romeo. A groaning, half-naked old man, pinioned by a
woman, has the devil on his back. Even a flying beast, part Icarus, part
Cerberus, with webbed feet, crashing to earth — one of Goya's classic
nightmare
inventions — seems to symbolize man's hubris and impotence.

I don't mean artistic impotence, of course, not with Goya, who tried his
hand at
yet one more new medium in Bordeaux. He painted on palm-size slivers of
ivory —
"original miniatures, which I have never seen the like of before," he
boasted,
rightly. On a dark, wet ground, he let fall a drop or two of water, whose
blots
and granulates suggested shapes, like the ones that Leonardo imagined in
stains
on old walls.

Goya conjured up a screaming monk and a goggle-eyed woman. A man picking
fleas.
Judith hacking off the head of Holofernes. A nude reclining, paint wiped from
the ivory to connote flesh. And Susannah ogled by the elders, the standard
fable of chaste youth and pathetic, dirty old men.

Broad fields of light and dark make these ivories like flashbulb snapshots.
Immediate and exquisite, they're nearly monumental. Like the late works of
Titian or Rembrandt, Goya's late works achieve a whole new level of
freedom and
depth, haunted by death but exalted. The Frick has picked for the show's
poster
the perfect image: one of the creepier Bordeaux drawings of a thick and
stumpy
old man on a swing, leering as he vaults skyward.

You can almost hear Goya cackle.

"Goya's Last Works" continues through May 14 at the Frick Collection, 1
East 70th Street, Manhattan; (212) 288-0700, or www.frick.org

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