Etching, burnished aquatint and burin, 215 x
151 mm. Harris 50, III-1 (of 12). Delteil 52.
Plate 15 of the Los Caprichos [The Caprices] series, first edition, 1799
(approximately 300 copies).
Superb impression printed in dark sepia on laid
paper. In very good condition. Slight yellowing of the sheet. Tiny thin areas
on the reverse in the upper corners. Margins slightly reduced (sheet: 265 x 187
mm).
Provenance:
- Loys Delteil (1869-1927) collection, his
stamp in black on the back (Lugt 773).
Loys Delteil, an important historian of printmaking and an engraver himself,
dedicated volumes 14 and 15 of his Peintre Graveur illustré (XIXe ET XXe SIECLES)
published in 1922, to the catalogue raisonné of Francisco Goya's prints.
- Goupil Paris, stamp printed in black,
bottom right (Lugt 1090a).
Maison Goupil was an art publishing house. Frits Lugt indicates in his 1921
directory of Marques de collections de
dessins & d’estampes that mark 1090a is rare, and found only on sheets
not published by Goupil. Maison Goupil was founded around 1827 by Adolphe
Goupil (1806-1893).
The manuscript in the Prado Museum, sometimes
attributed to Goya, has this comment about the plate: “Los consejos son dignos
de quien los da. Lo peor es que la señorita va a seguirlos al pie de la
letra.¡Desdichado del que se acerque!” “The advice is worthy of she who
dispenses it. The sad thing is that the young lady will follow it to the
letter. Woe is the first one to approach her!” (translated by us).
The pair formed by the young woman and the old
crone is reminiscent of the Maja and the Celestine, or the prostitute and her
madam, recurring characters in Goya’s œuvre. For now the chair of the suitor is
empty, but he appears in other plates from the Caprichos, such as Ni asi la
distingue [And Still He Doesn’t See Her],
¡Qué sacrificio ! [What A
Sacrifice!] ou ¿Quien màs rendido ? [Who Is The Most Servile?].
The Museo del Prado holds a preparatory sketch.
Price: 4500 EUR // 5250 USD