“They saw their injured country's woe;
The flaming town, the wasted field;
Then rushed to meet the insulting foe;
They took the spear, - but left the shield.”
Saturn Devouring his Son Goya 1820 – 1823 Oil on plaster Museo del Prado, Madrid Spain
Though this painting is called "Saturn" and seems rooted in showing the mythological character that devoured his son, there are, like many of the other 'Black Paintings' a certain disconnection between any strict understanding of the ancient tale versus Goya's depiction of it. While the other famous rendition of the story by Peter Paul Rubens (image below) carefully illustrates the story in detail, with this picture by Goya there is variation and improvisation. ...
Here's my New Year's greeting
ReplyDeleteI'll make it very brief:
Anyway you slice it
Time will act the Thief.
Happy Happy New Year!
That is my New Year's Song.
You see I kept my promise
It wasn't very long.
Whose painting?
ReplyDeleteBosch? or Blake?
hehe. Happy New Year, fj. Happy New Year, all.
ReplyDeleteI think it's Goya.
hiya FJ!!!HAPPY NEW YEAR sweet patriot!..xoxoxox
ReplyDeleteYou're right. It is Goya. I should have known!
ReplyDeleteMy first humiliation of the New Year. ;-)
Thank you for that. It's good for the soul.
And a very HAPPY NEW YEAR to you and All!
:)
ReplyDeleteSeeking dishonor? A noble pursuit, indeed. :)
ReplyDeleteFJ,
ReplyDeleteMay time devour you more slowly next year!
May it be so.
Contrary-wise wisdom.
ReplyDelete...a learning to "speak" the four discourses. ;)
ReplyDeleteNice video. :)
ReplyDeleteIt was from a movie, Little Big Man, that I enjoyed as a teen.
ReplyDeleteLittle Big Man is an excellent book! Worth readnig.
ReplyDeleteNever read the book. The film, I found very entertaining, esp. Little Big Horn.
ReplyDeleteSaturn Devouring his Son
ReplyDeleteGoya 1820 – 1823 Oil on plaster
Museo del Prado, Madrid Spain
Though this painting is called "Saturn" and seems rooted in showing the mythological character that devoured his son, there are, like many of the other 'Black Paintings' a certain disconnection between any strict understanding of the ancient tale versus Goya's depiction of it. While the other famous rendition of the story by Peter Paul Rubens (image below) carefully illustrates the story in detail, with this picture by Goya there is variation and improvisation. ...
http://www.eeweems.com/goya/saturn.html
ReplyDeleteDiscusses Goya's Saturn in some detail, also P.P. RUBENS radically different treatment of the same subject.