This series depicted the atrocities of The Spanish War of Independence created by the soldiers and citizens of war torn famished countries. From the moment you walk into the sangre red “Famine and War” room, you are stunned by the goriness you see in all 82 prints. Plate 33, “Qué hai que hacer mas,” contains three soldiers stretching a man’s legs open while holding him upside down on his head and another soldier slicing him in half down the groin. Just reading that sentence would make anyone nauseous but viewing all of these pieces had a profound affect on me and painted a very lifelike reality of this appalling time period on the Spanish peninsula. Goya wanted his viewers to experience the reality of social breakdown that he encountered everyday in Madrid. His goal with this series was to reveal the amount of human cost expensed with the trauma and indecipherability of war. Goya’s view of this war was an obvious animosity because of the unreasonable destruction, misery and loss of life that war brings with
This series depicted the atrocities of The Spanish War of Independence created by the soldiers and citizens of war torn famished countries. From the moment you walk into the sangre red “Famine and War” room, you are stunned by the goriness you see in all 82 prints. Plate 33, “Qué hai que hacer mas,” contains three soldiers stretching a man’s legs open while holding him upside down on his head and another soldier slicing him in half down the groin. Just reading that sentence would make anyone nauseous but viewing all of these pieces had a profound affect on me and painted a very lifelike reality of this appalling time period on the Spanish peninsula. Goya wanted his viewers to experience the reality of social breakdown that he encountered everyday in Madrid. His goal with this series was to reveal the amount of human cost expensed with the trauma and indecipherability of war. Goya’s view of this war was an obvious animosity because of the unreasonable destruction, misery and loss of life that war brings with