Another Brother for Goya’s “Red Boy”: Agustín Esteve’s Portrait of Francisco Xavier Osorio, Conde de Trastámara

IF 0.2 2区 艺术学 0 ART METROPOLITAN MUSEUM JOURNAL Pub Date : 2014-01-01 DOI:10.1086/680034
X. F. Salomon
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Goya’s portrait of the head of the family, Vicente Joaquín Osorio de Moscoso y Guzmán, conde de Altamira (Figure 1), was paid for on January 29, 1787, and was the first of the artist’s Altamira paintings.1 Commissioned by the Banco de San Carlos (renamed Banco de España after 1829), of which Altamira was a director, the portrait is still in the bank’s collection. In the succeeding two years, the count commissioned Goya to paint three portraits for the family’s palace on the calle de la Flor Alta in Madrid: the Metropolitan Museum’s full-length portrait of Altamira’s first wife, María Ignacia Álvarez de Toledo, with their infant daughter María Agustina (Figure 2), and their sons Vicente Isabel, conde de Trastámara (Figure 3), and Manuel, señor de Ginés (Figure 4), the “Red Boy.” Inventories of the Altamira collection reveal that family portraits by other artists hung in the palace as well. The postmortem inventory of the conde de Altamira, compiled between January 7 and February 8, 1817, lists a series of portraits of the count and his family, including an image of the count on horseback by Antonio Carnicero (1748 – 1814) and, in one room, “eight portraits of the family of the Count of Altamira.”2 A subsequent inventory, compiled on March 13 – 14, 1864, after the death of Vicente Pío Osorio de Moscoso y Ponce de León (the grandson of the conde de Altamira in Goya’s portrait [Figure 1]), lists in detail Goya’s portraits of the Altamira family along with those by a number of other painters.3 The equestrian portrait of the count by Carnicero was still in the palace, as was another portrait of him attributed in the inventory to Luis Egidio Meléndez (1716 – 1780).4 Two of the three Goya portraits — those of the countess with her daughter María Agustina (Figure 2) and the “Red Boy” (Figure 4) — are also listed, while for some unknown reason, the portrait of Vicente, conde de Trastámara (Figure 3), is not mentioned in the document.5 Another portrait by Goya, that of the architect Ventura Rodríguez, now in the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm, was also acquired by the Altamira family before 1864.6 The Altamiras owned a substantial group of family portraits by the Valencian painter Agustín Esteve y Marques (1753 – ca. 1820), who in the 1780s and 1790s collaborated with Goya, especially on portraits, and became a wellknown portraitist himself. According to early sources, he produced fourteen portraits for the family of the duke of Osuna and others for the dukes of Alba.7 Esteve must also have painted a significant number of portraits for the Altamira family. The Altamira inventory of 1864 documents several of them, including a set of portraits of the count and countess, and another single image of the count.8 It is unclear if one of these portraits of the conde de Altamira could be a version of the one signed by Esteve that is at present in the Universidad de Granada (Figure 5), or if the portrait of the countess can be identified with the one that was in the collection of José Calvo in Madrid in 1957.9 Five additional paintings of children by Esteve are listed in the 1864 Altamira family inventory. One of these portraits was oval in format and represented the daughter of the duque de Montemar with a small dog.10 Another portrayed a “girl with a tambourine in her hand, seated on a cushion.”11 Three of the canvases clearly represented four of the Altamira children. The first included a double portrait of Vicente, conde de Trastámara, and his sister María Agustina (both children were also portrayed by Goya: see Figures 3 and 2).12 The second and third were images of Francisco Xavier and Juan María, brothers of Vicente, Manuel (the “Red Boy”), and María Agustina.13 Another Brother for Goya’s “Red Boy”: Agustín Esteve’s Portrait of Francisco Xavier Osorio, Conde de Trastámara","PeriodicalId":42073,"journal":{"name":"METROPOLITAN MUSEUM JOURNAL","volume":"49 1","pages":"201 - 206"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2014-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1086/680034","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"METROPOLITAN MUSEUM JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1086/680034","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ART","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

The exhibition “Goya and the Altamira Family,” held at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from April 22 to August 3, 2014, brought together for the first time four portraits by Francisco de Goya y Lucientes painted about 1787 – 88. For the occasion, the celebrated “Red Boy” in the Museum’s collection was displayed together with likenesses of his parents and two of his siblings in a gallery of the European Paintings Department. Goya’s portrait of the head of the family, Vicente Joaquín Osorio de Moscoso y Guzmán, conde de Altamira (Figure 1), was paid for on January 29, 1787, and was the first of the artist’s Altamira paintings.1 Commissioned by the Banco de San Carlos (renamed Banco de España after 1829), of which Altamira was a director, the portrait is still in the bank’s collection. In the succeeding two years, the count commissioned Goya to paint three portraits for the family’s palace on the calle de la Flor Alta in Madrid: the Metropolitan Museum’s full-length portrait of Altamira’s first wife, María Ignacia Álvarez de Toledo, with their infant daughter María Agustina (Figure 2), and their sons Vicente Isabel, conde de Trastámara (Figure 3), and Manuel, señor de Ginés (Figure 4), the “Red Boy.” Inventories of the Altamira collection reveal that family portraits by other artists hung in the palace as well. The postmortem inventory of the conde de Altamira, compiled between January 7 and February 8, 1817, lists a series of portraits of the count and his family, including an image of the count on horseback by Antonio Carnicero (1748 – 1814) and, in one room, “eight portraits of the family of the Count of Altamira.”2 A subsequent inventory, compiled on March 13 – 14, 1864, after the death of Vicente Pío Osorio de Moscoso y Ponce de León (the grandson of the conde de Altamira in Goya’s portrait [Figure 1]), lists in detail Goya’s portraits of the Altamira family along with those by a number of other painters.3 The equestrian portrait of the count by Carnicero was still in the palace, as was another portrait of him attributed in the inventory to Luis Egidio Meléndez (1716 – 1780).4 Two of the three Goya portraits — those of the countess with her daughter María Agustina (Figure 2) and the “Red Boy” (Figure 4) — are also listed, while for some unknown reason, the portrait of Vicente, conde de Trastámara (Figure 3), is not mentioned in the document.5 Another portrait by Goya, that of the architect Ventura Rodríguez, now in the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm, was also acquired by the Altamira family before 1864.6 The Altamiras owned a substantial group of family portraits by the Valencian painter Agustín Esteve y Marques (1753 – ca. 1820), who in the 1780s and 1790s collaborated with Goya, especially on portraits, and became a wellknown portraitist himself. According to early sources, he produced fourteen portraits for the family of the duke of Osuna and others for the dukes of Alba.7 Esteve must also have painted a significant number of portraits for the Altamira family. The Altamira inventory of 1864 documents several of them, including a set of portraits of the count and countess, and another single image of the count.8 It is unclear if one of these portraits of the conde de Altamira could be a version of the one signed by Esteve that is at present in the Universidad de Granada (Figure 5), or if the portrait of the countess can be identified with the one that was in the collection of José Calvo in Madrid in 1957.9 Five additional paintings of children by Esteve are listed in the 1864 Altamira family inventory. One of these portraits was oval in format and represented the daughter of the duque de Montemar with a small dog.10 Another portrayed a “girl with a tambourine in her hand, seated on a cushion.”11 Three of the canvases clearly represented four of the Altamira children. The first included a double portrait of Vicente, conde de Trastámara, and his sister María Agustina (both children were also portrayed by Goya: see Figures 3 and 2).12 The second and third were images of Francisco Xavier and Juan María, brothers of Vicente, Manuel (the “Red Boy”), and María Agustina.13 Another Brother for Goya’s “Red Boy”: Agustín Esteve’s Portrait of Francisco Xavier Osorio, Conde de Trastámara
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戈雅“红男孩”的另一个兄弟:Agustín埃史蒂夫的弗朗西斯科·泽维尔·奥索里奥肖像,康德Trastámara
2014年4月22日至8月3日在大都会艺术博物馆举行的“戈雅与阿尔塔米拉家族”展览首次汇集了弗朗西斯科·德·戈雅·卢西恩特斯在1787年至1788年间创作的四幅肖像画。为此,博物馆收藏的著名的“红男孩”与他的父母和两个兄弟姐妹的肖像一起在欧洲绘画部的画廊展出。戈雅的家庭首领画像,Vicente Joaquín Osorio de Moscoso y Guzmán, conde de Altamira(图1),于1787年1月29日支付,是艺术家阿尔塔米拉的第一幅画这幅肖像是由阿尔塔米拉担任董事的圣卡洛斯银行(1829年后更名为España银行)委托制作的,目前仍在该银行的收藏中。在接下来的两年里,伯爵委托戈雅在马德里的la Flor Alta大街为家族的宫殿画了三幅肖像画:在Metropolitan博物馆里,阿尔塔米拉的第一任妻子María Ignacia Álvarez de Toledo和他们的女儿María Agustina(图2),他们的儿子Vicente Isabel, conde de Trastámara(图3)和Manuel, señor de gin(图4),“红男孩”。阿尔塔米拉收藏的清单显示,其他艺术家的家庭肖像也悬挂在宫殿里。在1817年1月7日至2月8日期间编纂的阿尔塔米拉孔德的尸检清单中,列出了一系列伯爵及其家人的肖像,包括安东尼奥·卡尼塞罗(Antonio Carnicero, 1748 - 1814)在马背上的一幅伯爵肖像,以及一个房间里的“阿尔塔米拉伯爵家族的八幅肖像”。1864年3月13日至14日,Vicente Pío Osorio de Moscoso y Ponce de León(戈雅肖像中阿尔塔米拉的孙子[图1])去世后,随后的一份清单详细列出了戈雅的阿尔塔米拉家族肖像以及其他一些画家的肖像卡尼塞罗为伯爵画的骑马肖像仍然在宫殿里,还有一幅他的肖像,在目录中被认为是路易斯·埃吉迪奥·梅尔萨姆德斯(1716 - 1780)的戈雅的三幅肖像画中的两幅——伯爵夫人和她的女儿María Agustina(图2)和“红男孩”(图4)——也被列了出来,而出于某种未知的原因,比森特的肖像画conde de Trastámara(图3)没有在文件中被提及戈雅的另一幅肖像,建筑师文图拉Rodríguez,现在在斯德哥尔摩的国家博物馆,也在1864.6阿尔塔米拉家族拥有大量的家庭肖像,由巴伦西亚画家Agustín Esteve y Marques (1753 - ca. 1820),谁在1780年代和1790年代与戈雅合作,特别是在肖像,并成为一个著名的肖像画家自己。根据早期的资料,他为奥苏纳公爵家族和阿尔巴公爵家族创作了14幅肖像画。7埃斯蒂夫一定也为阿尔塔米拉家族画了大量肖像画。1864年的阿尔塔米拉目录记录了其中的几张,包括一组伯爵和伯爵夫人的肖像,以及另一张伯爵的肖像目前尚不清楚阿尔塔米拉伯爵夫人的这些肖像中是否有一幅可能是目前在格拉纳达大学的埃斯蒂夫签名的那幅(图5),或者伯爵夫人的肖像是否可以与1957年在马德里的约瑟夫·卡尔沃收藏的那幅相一致。1864年阿尔塔米拉家族目录中列出了埃斯蒂夫的另外五幅儿童画。其中一幅是椭圆形的,画的是蒙特马尔公爵的女儿和一只小狗另一幅画描绘了一个“手里拿着小手鼓的女孩,坐在垫子上”。其中三幅画清楚地描绘了阿尔塔米拉家的四个孩子。第一幅画包括维森特的两幅肖像,孔德Trastámara和他的妹妹María阿古斯蒂娜(两个孩子也被戈雅画过:见图3和图2)第二幅和第三幅是弗朗西斯科·泽维尔和胡安María,他们是维森特的兄弟,曼努埃尔(“红男孩”)和María奥古斯丁。13戈雅“红男孩”的另一个兄弟:Agustín埃史蒂夫的弗朗西斯科·泽维尔·奥索里奥肖像,康德Trastámara
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