FRANCISCO DE GOYA Y LUCIENTES (1746-1828)
FRANCISCO DE GOYA Y LUCIENTES (1746-1828)

Lo que puede un sastre, plate 52 from: Los Caprichos

细节
FRANCISCO DE GOYA Y LUCIENTES (1746-1828)
Lo que puede un sastre, plate 52 from: Los Caprichos
etching with burnished aquatint, drypoint and engraving
1797-98
on laid paper, without watermark
Harris' state II.1 (of three)
a very fine, early trial proof, with letters but before the exclamation mark in the title
a very rare trial proof before the edition published by the artist in 1799
(Harris recorded only three such proofs)
printing sharply, with great contrasts and inky relief
some aquatint left unburnished on and around the left hand of the phantom
trimmed inside the platemark but retaining a blank border outside the image
in good condition
Sheet 21,1 x 13,6 cm. (8 3⁄8 x 5 3⁄8 in.)
来源
Dr. Josef Hupka (1875-1944), Vienna (without stamp and not in Lugt; according to Kornfeld).
Galerie Kornfeld, Bern, 21 June 2001, lot 387.
Acquired at the above sale; then by descent to the present owners.
出版
L. Delteil, Le peintre graveur illustré: Francisco Goya, Paris, 1922, no. 89 (another impression ill.).
T. Harris, Goya - Engravings and Lithographs - Catalogue raisonné, Oxford, 1964, no. 87, pp. 125-126 (another impression ill.).
展览
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Goya - Das Zeitalter der Revolutionen, 1789-1830, October 1980 - January 1981, no. 45, p. 98-99 (ill.).
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Verhext – Phantastische Graphik aus der Sammlung Hegewisch, November 1997 – March 1998 (no cat.).

荣誉呈献

Zack Boutwood
Zack Boutwood Cataloguer

拍品专文

Titled Lo que puede un sastre! ('What a tailor can do!'), plate 52 of the Caprichos shows a young woman and other figures falling on their knees in front of a broken tree dressed as a bogeyman. It is clearly an allegory for the gullibility of the people, arguing that it takes very little to make them believe - in superstition, religion, authority and power. The demons in the air, depicted in delicate etched lines only, are clearly figments of the woman's fantasy, demonstrating how willingly her imagination adds to the charade.
Goya seems to have completed the plates almost without revisions before he started printing the edition; there are very few working or trial proofs of the Caprichos, most of which only show errors and omissions in the titles or tiny differences in the subject compared to the finished prints, such as the present example. Yet, these earliest impressions, pulled from pristine plates, allow us to appreciate Goya's mastery of etching and aquatint in their full splendour and subtlety.

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