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8.11: The Disasters of War (Los Desastres de la Guerra)

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    362264
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    The Disasters of War (Los Desastres de la Guerra)

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    Artist: Francisco Goya
    Medium: Etching, aquatint, and drypoint
    Art Historical Time Period: Spanish Romanticism, 1810–1820

    Francisco Goya’s The Disasters of War is a series of 82 prints created during and after the war between Spain and Napoleonic France. Goya witnessed the violence firsthand and used this series to document the suffering of civilians, executions, starvation, and cruelty. Unlike traditional war art that glorified battle, Goya’s work condemned it. The culture that produced this series was torn by occupation, rebellion, and political instability. Goya’s prints reflect a moral crisis—he does not show heroes, only victims and perpetrators of violence. His work asks viewers to confront the human cost of war and the failure of governments to protect their people.

    What made this series innovative was its raw honesty and technical experimentation. Goya used aquatint and drypoint to create dark, grainy textures that matched the emotional weight of the scenes. He removed background details to make the violence feel universal. These prints were not published until decades after his death, likely due to fear of political backlash. Goya’s series influenced modern photojournalism, anti-war art, and documentary film. Artists like Otto Dix followed his example by showing war’s brutality without romanticism. The Disasters of War remains one of the most powerful moral statements in Western art history.

    Vocabulary

    • aquatint a printmaking technique that creates tone and texture
    • etching a process of using acid to carve designs into metal for printing

    • Romanticism – an art style that focuses on emotion, imagination, and individual experience

    Student Authors

    • Claudia Larios ’26 and Milton Lima ‘27

    References and Image Attribution

    • Altıparmak, G. (2024). Goya in the period I lived and The Disasters of War series. SSD Journal, 9(43), 153–162. https://doi.org/10.31567/ssd.1132 Vega, J. (2001). 

    • Tomlinson, J. (2002). Goya: Images of women. Yale University Press.

    • Image: “Plate 15 from "The Disasters of War' (Los Desastres de la Guerra) MET DP817285” via Wikimedia Commons by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, licensed under Public Domain. Modified from original.

     

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    8.11: The Disasters of War (Los Desastres de la Guerra) is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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