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Feminine Folly (Disparate Femenino) from Los Proverbiosö

ca. 1819
19th century
8 1/2 in. x 12 5/8 in. (21.59 cm x 32.07 cm)

Francisco de Goya, Spanish, (1746–1828)

Object Type: Prints
Creation Place: Europe, Spain
Medium and Support: etching with aquatint on paper
Credit Line: Carleton College Art Collection
Accession Number: 1997.563
Goya was a consummate technician in the printmaking arena, achieving powerful emotional and pictorial effects with etching and lithography. He created four important etching series during his lifetime, including the Disasters of War and the Proverbs.
The Disasters of War, a series of 56 etchings, responded to the French invasion of the Iberian peninsula in 1808. Although triggered by specific historical events, the prints read as gripping exposes of the atrocities of war in general. Charity, from the Carleton collection, reveals the dehumanizing effect of warfare on communities. In this ironically titled image, men carelessly toss the naked bodies of the dead into a common grave.
The Proverbs, including Carleton’s Feminine Folly, is a series of enigmatic images created between about 1819 and 1824, when Goya moved to a house north of Madrid called La Quinta del Sordo, or the House of the Deaf Man. These puzzling pictures share some of the nightmarish qualities of the Black Paintings rendered mural-scale in the artist’s house.
The Goya prints came to Carleton within two years of one another. Charity was part of the Pomerat Collection Bequest, 1968; Feminine Folly was purchased by the Art Department in 1970 with proceeds from the Print Rental Program initiated in the late 1950s.

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