
A woman and two children by a fountain
Francisco Goya·1786
Historical Context
A Woman and Two Children by a Fountain is a tapestry cartoon from around 1786 in the Carmen Thyssen Collection. It belongs to Goya's later series of cartoons, where the carefree rococo gaiety of his earlier designs gives way to more observant, naturalistic scenes of everyday Spanish life. The image of a woman at a public fountain with children reflects the communal social spaces of eighteenth-century Madrid, where fountains served as gathering places for women and children. Goya's treatment of the subject shows increasing atmospheric sensitivity and tonal subtlety. These later cartoons were recognized by nineteenth-century critics as harboring the seeds of Goya's mature social realism.
Technical Analysis
Goya renders the domestic scene with characteristic naturalism and the bright palette required for tapestry, using the fountain as a compositional anchor for the intimate grouping of figures.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the fountain as social gathering place: the communal water source brings together women and children in a naturalistic social grouping that Goya observes with the anthropological precision he brought to Madrid street life.
- ◆Look at the atmospheric landscape treatment of these later cartoons: the warm, hazy depth of the background exceeds the purely decorative requirements of the tapestry medium.
- ◆Observe the naturalistic rendering of the domestic group: the woman and children have the specific, observed quality of real people rather than composed types.
- ◆Find how this represents a late transitional moment: these final cartoons, made around 1786, show Goya moving toward the social observation that would characterize his mature work.

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