“Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel” by Francisco Goya

Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel by Francisco Goya Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel by Francisco Goya depicts Isabel Lobo Velasco de Porcel, who was...
Mantilla
Francisco Goya
Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel
Francisco Goya
Goyas Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel
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Explore The National Gallery
Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel by Francisco Goya at National Gallery London England
Paintings by Francisco de Goya

“Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel” by Francisco Goya depicts Isabel Lobo Velasco de Porcel, who was born at Ronda around 1780. The half-length portrait depicts a young woman dressed in typical Spanish attire, a white shirt, and a black mantilla.

The richness of the textiles and her appearance give the picture an aristocratic elegance.

The decisive gesture in which the hands are on the hips and the elbows are bowed outward, and her confidence stands out.

Her eyes and hair are light browns, her skin is pale, and her body is slightly turned, while her head gives balance by being turned to the opposite side.

Goya has achieved realism and deepness without adding any other objects to the composition. A unique aspect of this painting is that the woman is looking towards the left side of the viewer and not directly at the artist.

Most of Goya’s paintings have the subject looking at the viewer.

Isabel’s husband was 25 years older than her, and they met when she was 20 years old. The painting is said to have been a gift from the Goya in return for the Porcel family’s hospitality.

A Goya portrait of her husband was lost in a fire during a riot in 1953.

Mantilla

A mantilla is a traditional Spanish lace or silk veil worn over the head and shoulders, often over a high comb called a ‘peineta,’ popular with women in Spain. The shape, design, and use are different from an ordinary veil.

The lightweight ornamental mantilla came into use in the warmer regions of Spain towards the end of the 16th century. The ones made of lace became popular with women in the 17th and 18th centuries.

They were depicted and popularized in portraits by Velázquez and Goya. By 1900 the use of the mantilla became limited mainly to formal occasions such as bullfights, Holy Week, and weddings.

Francisco Goya

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746 – 1828) was a Spanish painter and printmaker. He was the most important Spanish artist of the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Goya was famously successful in his lifetime, the last of the Old Masters and the first of the moderns.

He was born to a modest family in Aragon, Spain, and started the study of painting from the age of 14. He married at the age of 27, and after a series of pregnancies and miscarriages, only one child, a son, survived into adulthood.

Goya became the court painter to the Spanish Crown in 1786. This early part of his career is marked by portraits of the Spanish aristocracy and royalty and Rococo style tapestry cartoons designed for the royal palace.

Goya suffered a severe illness in 1793, which left him deaf. Sick and disillusioned, his work became progressively darker and pessimistic.

His later paintings, prints, and drawings seem to reflect a bleaker outlook. In 1807 Napoleon led the French army into war against Spain. Goya remained in Madrid during the war, which appears to have affected him deeply.

Artworks from his mid-period include a variety of paintings concerned with insanity, mental asylums, witches, fantastical creatures, and religious and political corruption.

They all suggested that Goya feared for both his country’s fate and his own psychological and physical health.

In Goya’s late period, he was disillusioned by the political and social developments in Spain, and he lived in near isolation.

Goya eventually abandoned Spain in 1824 to retire to the French city of Bordeaux, accompanied by his younger maid and his companion.

Following a stroke that left him paralyzed on his right side and suffering failing eyesight, he died and was buried in 1828, aged 82. His body was later re-interred in Madrid.

Famously, however, Goya’s skull went missing, a detail the Spanish consul in France immediately communicated to his superiors in Madrid. The Spanish authorities wired back, “Send Goya, with or without a head.”

Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel

  • Title:              Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel
  • Artist:             Francisco de Goya
  • Created:        1805
  • Medium:        oil on canvas
  • Dimensions:   Height: 82 cm (32.2 ″); Width: 54.6 cm (21.4 ″)
  • Museum:       National Gallery, London

Francisco Goya

  • Name:          Francisco Goya
  • Birth:            1746 – Fuendetodos, Aragon, Spain
  • Died:            1828 (aged 82) – Bordeaux, France
  • Nationality:  Spanish
  • Movement:  Romanticism
  • Masterpieces:
    • The Third of May 1808
    • The Repentant St. Peter
    • Saturn Devouring His Son
    • Portrait of Doña Antonia Zárate
    • Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel

Goya’s ‘Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel’

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13th Century Paintings

  • “The Virgin and Child Enthroned, with Narrative Scenes” by Margarito d’Arezzo – 1264
  • “The Virgin and Child” by Master of the Clarisse – 1268
  • “Crucifix” by Master of Saint Francis – 1270

14th Century Paintings

  • Wilton Diptych – 1395
  • “The Annunciation” by Duccio – 1311
  • “The Healing of the Man Born Blind” by Duccio – 1311

15th Century Paintings

  • “Arnolfini Portrait” by Jan van Eyck –  1434
  • “The Battle of San Romano” by Paolo Uccello– 1440
  • “Venus and Mars” by Sandro Botticelli – 1483
  • “Portrait of Doge Leonardo Loredan” by Giovanni Bellini– 1501

16th Century Paintings

  • “Virgin of the Rocks” by Leonardo da Vinci – 1506
  • “The Madonna of the Pinks” by Raphael – 1507
  • “The Raising of Lazarus” by Sebastiano del Piombo– 1519
  • “Salvator Mundi” by Andrea Previtali – 1519
  • “Bacchus and Ariadne” by Titian – 1523
  • “The Ambassadors” by Hans Holbein the Younger – 1533
  • “Mary Magdalene” by Girolamo Savoldo – 1540
  • “Saint George and the Dragon” by Tintoretto – 1558
  • “The Family of Darius before Alexander” by Paolo Veronese – 1567
  • “Diana and Actaeon” by Titian – 1569
  • “The Rape of Europa” by Paolo Veronese – 1570
  • “The Death of Actaeon” by Titian – 1575
  • “The Origin of the Milky Way” by Tintoretto – 1575

17th Century Paintings

  • “Supper at Emmaus” by Caravaggio – 1601
  • “Samson and Delilah” by Peter Paul Rubens – 1610
  • “The Judgement of Paris” by Peter Paul Rubens – 1635
  • “Aurora abducting Cephalus” by Peter Paul Rubens – 1637
  • “Equestrian Portrait of Charles I” by Anthony van Dyck – 1638
  • “Venus at her Mirror” by Diego Velázquez – 1651
  • “Self Portrait at the Age of 63″ by Rembrandt – 1669
  • “A Young Woman standing at a Virginal” by Johannes Vermeer – 1670

18th Century Paintings

  • “Bacchus and Ariadne” by Sebastiano Ricci – 1713
  • “A Regatta on the Grand Canal” by Canaletto – 1740
  • “Mr. and Mrs. Andrews” by Thomas Gainsborough – 1749
  • “Eton College” by Canaletto – 1754
  • “An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump” by Joseph Wright of Derby – 1768
  • “Self-portrait in a Straw Hat” by Louise Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun – 1782

19th Century Paintings

  • “Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel” by Francisco Goya – 1805
  • “The Emperor Napoleon I” by Horace Vernet – 1815
  • “Dido Building Carthage” by J. M. W. Turner – 1815
  • “Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows” by John Constable – 1831
  • “The Execution of Lady Jane Grey” by Paul Delaroche – 1833
  • “The Fighting Temeraire” by Joseph Mallord William Turner – 1839
  • “Rain, Steam and Speed – The Great Western Railway” by J. M. W. Turner – 1844
  • “Cimabue’s Celebrated Madonna is carried in Procession through the Streets of Florence” by Frederic Leighton – 1855
  • “Madame Moitessier” by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres– 1856
  • “The Gare St-Lazare” by Claude Monet – 1877
  • “Bathers at Asnières” by Georges Seurat – 1884
  • “Sunflowers” by Vincent van Gogh – 1888
  • “After the Bath, Woman Drying Herself” by Edgar Degas – 1895
  • “Boulevard Montmartre at Night” by Camille Pissarro – 1898

20th Century Paintings

  • “Misia Sert” by Pierre-Auguste Renoir –  1904
  • “Portrait of Hermine Gallia” by Gustav Klimt – 1904
  • Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses) by  Paul Cézanne – 1905
  • “Men of the Docks” by George Bellows –  1912
  • “Water-Lilies” by Claude Monet (National Gallery, London) – 1916

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“Portrait of Doña Isabel de Porcel” by Francisco Goya at National Gallery London England

Paintings by Francisco de Goya

~~~

“The act of painting is about one heart telling another heart where he found salvation.”
– Francisco de Goya

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Photo Credit 1) Francisco Goya [Public domain]

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1 July 2019, 13:00 | Views: 4728

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