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A work made of etching, burnished aquatint and drypoint on ivory laid paper.

The daring of Martincho in the ring at Saragossa, plate 18 from The Art of Bullfighting

1814/16, published 1816

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes Spanish, 1746-1828

Spain

Francisco de Goya was an enthusiastic bullfighting aficionado and even claimed to have been a torero (bullfighter) in his younger years. Yet it is unlikely that he meant this print series to be seen only as a fan’s outline of the history of bullfighting in Spain. In the early 19th century, when Goya published these prints, bullfighting was a politically charged activity. It was seen either as bread and circus (or pan y toros [bread and bulls], as a reformist tract put it), meant to keep the populace distracted, or as an expression of Spanish nationalism—a spectacle imbued with patriotic fervor.

Etching, burnished aquatint and drypoint on ivory laid paper

Prints and Drawings