
Portrait of General José Manuel Romero
Francisco Goya·c. 1810
Historical Context
Goya's portrait of General José Manuel Romero from around 1810 was painted during the Peninsular War, when Napoleon's French armies occupied Spain and Goya navigated the complex politics of serving the French-installed Joseph Bonaparte while maintaining his position at the Spanish court. Romero served as Spain's Minister of Justice under Joseph Bonaparte — one of the collaborators whom Spanish nationalists called afrancesados. Goya's portraits from this period serve both French and Spanish patrons with equal competence, the painter's political ambiguity reflected in the neutrality of his brush. The portrait's directness and psychological penetration show the mature Goya at his most concentrated.
Technical Analysis
Goya's mature portrait technique combines bold, free brushwork with penetrating psychological observation. The face is modeled with warm flesh tones and sharp highlights against a dark background, while the military uniform is rendered with broad, confident strokes. The overall darkness of the palette creates an atmosphere of wartime gravity.







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