ArtvestigeArtvestige
PaintingsArtistsEras
Artvestige

Artvestige

The most comprehensive free reference for European painting. 40,000+ works across ten eras, every one with expert analysis.

Explore

PaintingsArtistsErasData Sources & CreditsContactPrivacy Policy

About

Artvestige is an independent reference and is not affiliated with any museum. All images courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

© 2026 Artvestige. All painting images are public domain / open access.

Queen María Luisa on horseback by Francisco Goya

Queen María Luisa on horseback

Francisco Goya·1799

Historical Context

Goya painted Queen María Luisa on horseback in 1799 as one of a pair of equestrian portraits — the companion piece shows Charles IV. The queen sits astride her horse in a military-style riding habit, projecting an image of royal authority that contrasts with the widespread perception of her as a manipulative figure who dominated her weak husband through her relationship with Manuel Godoy. Goya's equestrian portraits draw on the tradition established by Velázquez's equestrian paintings of the Habsburg monarchs in the same Prado collection. The formal splendor of the composition belies the political instability of a reign that would end in abdication and exile within a decade.

Technical Analysis

Goya renders the mounted queen with the formal requirements of equestrian portraiture while maintaining his characteristic refusal to flatter, creating a portrait of regal authority complicated by honest observation.

Look Closer

  • ◆Notice the equestrian format's demanding conventions: Goya draws on the royal riding portrait tradition established by Velázquez, and the composition consciously refers to those authoritative precedents.
  • ◆Look at the queen's military-style riding habit: this masculine dress projects royal authority in a format that connected women to the martial tradition of equestrian power.
  • ◆Observe the formal splendor of the composition: the landscape setting, the rearing horse's controlled energy, the queen's composed bearing — all serve the official function of projecting Bourbon dynastic authority.
  • ◆Find the political irony: the splendid official image of royal authority was made during a reign that would end in abdication and exile within a decade.

See It In Person

Museo del Prado

Madrid, Spain

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil paint
Dimensions
338 × 282 cm
Era
Romanticism
Style
Spanish Romanticism
Genre
Animal
Location
Museo del Prado, Madrid
View on museum website →

More by Francisco Goya

Portrait of General José Manuel Romero by Francisco Goya

Portrait of General José Manuel Romero

Francisco Goya·c. 1810

El Maragato Threatens Friar Pedro de Zaldivia with His Gun by Francisco Goya

El Maragato Threatens Friar Pedro de Zaldivia with His Gun

Francisco Goya·c. 1806

Friar Pedro Clubs El Maragato with the Butt of the Gun by Francisco Goya

Friar Pedro Clubs El Maragato with the Butt of the Gun

Francisco Goya·c. 1806

Portrait of Isidoro Maiquez by Francisco Goya

Portrait of Isidoro Maiquez

Francisco Goya·c. 1807

More from the Romanticism Period

The Fountain at Grottaferrata by Adrian Ludwig (Ludwig) Richter

The Fountain at Grottaferrata

Adrian Ludwig (Ludwig) Richter·1832

Dante's Bark by Eugène Delacroix

Dante's Bark

Eugène Delacroix·c. 1840–60

Shipwreck by Jean-Baptiste Isabey

Shipwreck

Jean-Baptiste Isabey·19th century

Portrait of Emmanuel Rio by Albert Schindler

Portrait of Emmanuel Rio

Albert Schindler·1836