
General Antonio Ricardos
Francisco Goya·1793
Historical Context
Goya painted General Antonio Ricardos around 1793-94, shortly after the general's death from illness contracted during the War of the Pyrenees against Revolutionary France. Ricardos had won significant victories against the French in Roussillon in 1793, becoming a national hero. Goya's posthumous portrait, based on earlier sittings, presents the general in military dress with a commanding but weary expression. The painting belongs to Goya's early period of portraiture, when he was establishing himself as Spain's leading portraitist following the death of his rival Anton Raphael Mengs. Now in the Prado, it demonstrates Goya's ability to convey both military authority and human vulnerability in a single composition.
Technical Analysis
Goya renders the general with characteristic psychological penetration, using the military uniform and composed bearing to convey authority while the face reveals the strains of command.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the military honors rendered with care: Ricardos's decorations document the campaigns and victories that made him a national hero before his early death in 1794.
- ◆Look at the composed, weary expression: this posthumous portrait based on earlier sittings captures both military authority and the physical cost of prolonged campaign.
- ◆Observe how Goya creates a convincing portrait despite the posthumous context: the painting maintains the living presence of its subject through the quality of its psychological engagement.
- ◆Find the historical significance: painted at the start of Spain's engagement with Revolutionary France, Ricardos represented the professional military tradition that would be tested to breaking point within fifteen years.

_1790.jpg&width=600)



.jpg&width=600)