
The Madhouse
Francisco Goya·1814
Historical Context
The Madhouse, painted around 1812-19, depicts inmates of an asylum in a vaulted stone chamber, some naked, some in grotesque poses of delusion — one wears a feathered headdress, another mimics a king. Goya likely drew on his visit to the asylum in Zaragoza and possibly the Hospital de los Inocentes in Valencia. The painting belongs to a group of cabinet pictures on themes of violence, madness, and social breakdown that Goya produced during and after the Peninsular War. Unlike eighteenth-century depictions of madness as entertainment (such as Hogarth's Rake in Bedlam), Goya's treatment conveys genuine horror and compassion. The work is now in the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando in Madrid.
Technical Analysis
Goya renders the asylum interior with dramatic chiaroscuro, light from a barred window illuminating the disturbed inmates. The range of expressions and postures—from catatonic to violent—is rendered with raw, unflinching observation that refuses to sentimentalize mental suffering.
Look Closer
- ◆Notice the variety of delusions among the inmates: one wears a feathered headdress and mimics a king, another poses like a warrior — their fantasies are individual even within shared confinement.
- ◆Look at the light entering through the barred window: this single source of illumination both reveals the inmates and emphasizes their imprisonment, the light that shows them also emphasizing what they cannot reach.
- ◆Observe the range of postures from violent agitation to catatonic withdrawal: Goya refuses to simplify mental illness into a single visual type, rendering instead the full bewildering spectrum of breakdown.
- ◆Find the compassion embedded in the clinical observation: unlike Hogarth's asylum scene in The Rake's Progress, Goya's madhouse is not entertainment — the horror is genuine, and the suffering commands respect.

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