
The Clothed Maja
Francisco Goya·1800
Historical Context
The Clothed Maja (La maja vestida), painted around 1800-1805, is the companion piece to the more famous Naked Maja, depicting the same woman in the same reclining pose but fully dressed in a white Empire-style gown with a pink sash. The identity of the model remains debated — candidates include the Duchess of Alba, Pepita Tudó (Godoy's mistress), or an idealized composite. Both paintings belonged to Manuel Godoy and were displayed together in his private cabinet. The Clothed Maja's sheer fabrics cling to the body in a way that some contemporaries found more provocative than outright nudity. The pair are now displayed together in the Prado, iconic works of Spanish art and early celebrations of female sensuality.
Technical Analysis
Goya renders the elaborate white costume with remarkable virtuosity, using fluid brushwork to capture the translucency of fabric over the body beneath. The direct, confident gaze of the sitter and her provocative pose create a tension between clothed propriety and sensual allure.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice how the white Empire gown clings to the body beneath: the sheer fabric's transparency creates an erotic charge that some contemporaries found more provocative than the outright nudity of the companion painting.
- ◆Look at the direct, confident gaze: the same challenging look that appears in La Maja Desnuda — the sitter's identity with the nude is implied by the identical pose and this particular quality of attention.
- ◆Observe the virtuoso rendering of white fabric: Goya uses variations of white, cream, and shadow to create the translucent quality of muslin over a body beneath.
- ◆Find the pink sash accent: this single warm color note against the white dress and the light background demonstrates Goya's precise placement of color within a restricted palette.

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