Instructional Video2:59
Curated Video

Two Old Men and Restoration of Francisco Goya's Black Paintings

9th - Higher Ed
It is impossible to know for sure who is depicted in Goya's Black Paintings, but there is evidence to suggest that the man in Two Old Men is Goya himself. Goya was a great admirer of the painter Diego Velázquez and this painting closely...
Instructional Video1:50
Curated Video

Allegories of State Violence and Tribalism in Francisco Goya's Black Paintings

9th - Higher Ed
Judith and Holofernes depicts a story from the Bible in which Judith and her maidservant behead the tyrant Holofernes. By removing the peripheral iconographies and focusing only on the violent action, Goya brings this story into his own...
Instructional Video1:28
Curated Video

Francisco Goya's Death and Legacy

9th - Higher Ed
At age 78, Francisco Goya left Spain to start over in France. Four years later, he died there. Goya was a radical artist who was passionate about truth. He went from a painter in the Royal Court to the chronicler of catastrophe during...
Instructional Video2:52
Curated Video

La Leocadia, Francisco Goya's Mistress

9th - Higher Ed
La Leocadia, also known as The Seductress, is likely one of Goya's last paintings. It is painted on a light background, unlike the dark background of the rest of the Black Paintings. The woman in the painting bears a striking resemblance...
Instructional Video1:44
Curated Video

Comparing Francisco Goya's Women Laughing and Men Reading

9th - Higher Ed
Women Laughing depticts a risqué scene, unusual for the reserved and somewhat prudish Goya. The style and composition of this painting closely resembles Men Reading, which was painted next to Women Laughing on Goya's wall. Could the...
Instructional Video4:58
Curated Video

Power and Dispair in Goya's paintings: Asmodea, Saturn, and The Drowning Dog

9th - Higher Ed
The Black Paintings series by Francisco Goya is dark and haunting overall, but a few of the paintings are particularly grim. We will explore themes of war and fear, the horror of power, and helplessness as we analyze the last three...
Instructional Video1:34
Curated Video

How Francisco Goya uses Mythology as Symbolism for Personal Struggle in the Altropos Painting

9th - Higher Ed
Altropos (The Fates) is Francisco Goya's interpretation of the myth of the Moirai, the three sisters who decide the life and death of mortals. He added in a fourth, male figure in his painting and a baby. The sisters inspect the thread...
Instructional Video5:00
Curated Video

Theories Behind Francisco Goya's Black Paintings

9th - Higher Ed
The Black Paintings (Las pinturas negras) are often considered to deptic insanity and Goya's own struggles after losing his hearing. But is that an accurate understanding of these paintings? What is the context of the The Black...
Instructional Video1:05
Curated Video

Class Disparity and Gluttony in Francisco Goya's Two Old Men Eating Soup

9th - Higher Ed
Two Old Men Eating Soup, also sometimes called The Witches, is one of the best preserved Black Paintings. It is a small painting that hung above Goya's kitchen doorway. This may be another depiction of the have versus have nots theme...
Instructional Video5:15
TED-Ed

Why Is This Painting so Shocking?

9th - 12th Standards
Guernica stands as a masterpiece of anti-war art. The narrator of a short video examines the images in Picasso's massive, complex, and disturbing painting and offers an explanation of what the images may symbolize.