Francisco de Goya
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Funny, rude and macabre works by Spanish artist will feature in new exhibition at Courtauld Gallery in London
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Though flawed, this titanic exhibition brings together some of the most racked and disturbing artworks in history, writes Jason Farago
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From bloody severed heads to nightmare visions of hell, via gruesome gargoyles, creepy shrouded lovers and a fresco of death riding a skeleton horse, here’s our pick of the most unsettling pieces of art ever produced. Prepare to be spooked …
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Gallery: One of the titans of European art, Francisco Goya (1746–1828) witnessed a time of revolution and sweeping change in thought and behaviour – as a new Boston exhibition demonstrates
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Art lovers don't like it but one leading gallery has given up trying to stop visitors taking snaps of themselves in front of the pictures
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From Francis Bacon's obsession with Diego Velázquez to Sigmar Polke's update of a classic Goya drawing, here are some great cases of art history repeating itself
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Jonathan Jones: Next year's show at Scotland's National Gallery of Modern Art proves that images of sorcery and satanic sex never go out of fashion
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The British Museum is exhibiting some of its least-known treasures – centuries of Spanish drawings and prints, including works by Goya and Velázquez
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Drawings and prints that languished in collection show country's artists were producing great art for hundreds of years
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Jonathan Jones: Rarely-seen prints and drawings on show at the British Museum tell the story of Spanish art, plus the Liverpool Biennial, John Golding and Rita Ackermann – all in today's weekly art dispatch
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In Jonathan Jones's latest daily selection of artworks that capture the essence of spring, Goya reminds us that it's a season of rebirth not only for flowers but for nations
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One of modern Britain's most important artists at the Hayward, while Donatello devastates at the V&A
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In the latest of his series of favourite wintry artworks, Jonathan Jones admires the compassion and elegance of Goya's Snowstorm, an oil-painted paean to Spain's heroic underclass
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Jonathan Jones: From a daring exhibition of Leonardo's court paintings to Restoration naughtiness and English National Ballet's rehearsals at the Tate, discover the week's top shows and art news
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Earlier work found under artist's 1823 portrait of Madrid judge Don Ramón Satué may depict Napoleon Bonaparte's brother
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Beneath Goya's powerful 1823 portrait of Don Ramón Satué, researchers have discovered another, hidden work
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Sandy Nairne tracks a portrait from the National Gallery to Dr No's lair
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Tate Britain's new show proves there's more to watercolours than pallid sunsets, but where are the happy amateurs, asks Adrian Searle
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Royal Academy, London
This once-in-a-lifetime exhibition transforms European art by showing it through Hungarian eyes, writes Jonathan Jones
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Jonathan Jones: From Goya to Picasso, artists have painted pictures that depend on the gore and passion of the bullfight for their greatness – so will the bloodsport's demise mean the end of tragic art?
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Sam Leith: The idea that miserablists make good artists is poisonous creed. If you think art is more important than having a happy life, you need your head read
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Masterpieces that have never been loaned before to go on show in London this autumn
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Jonathan Jones: The 17th-century master's painting seethes with demonic figures, but do they reflect his fear of witchcraft or simply a fascination with fear itself?
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Little is known about Goya, but Diana Athill never fails to be moved by his tender portraits
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Manchester Art Gallery, to 31 Jan, 2010
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A dazzling exhibition tells how Spain's treasures arrived in Britain and inspired our painters, says Laura Cumming
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Tour a dazzling exhibition of Spanish culture at the National Gallery in Edinburgh, where the likes of El Greco and Velázquez feature alongside British artists who were inspired by Spain
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British painters fell for Spain in the 19th century – but they couldn't match its great artists. Adrian Searle on Edinburgh's mixed bag of a show
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Questions over authorship are nothing new, but that doesn't mean the work is a fake
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Decision to remove artist's name from symbol of Spanish resistance follows lengthy Prado study
Goya's Colossus actually painted by his assistant, says expert
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Jonathan Jones: Goya is already, in his early works, what he will remain: a superbly accomplished and formidably talented painter who manages to hang on to some very precious provincial naive quality
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FBI agents in New Jersey have recovered a painting by Francisco de Goya that was stolen as it was being taken to an exhibition earlier this month, the agency announced on Monday.
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A painting by Francisco de Goya that disappeared in transit earlier this month has been retrieved, the FBI announced yesterday.
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