Paintings: Francisco Goya app for iPhone and iPad


4.7 ( 7187 ratings )
Reference Education
Developer: CornerStone Media Ventures
0.99 USD
Current version: 2.5, last update: 7 years ago
First release : 10 May 2011
App size: 261.23 Mb

In this FULL VERSION, designed for iPhone and iPad, you will find 139 paintings by the master Francisco Goya. Enjoy the high quality images of his paintings, share them with your friends, and learn about the artist life.
You can browse this fantastic visual gallery chronologically (by year) or thematically: Tapestry cartoons, The Royal Family, Portraits, Religion, black paintings and others.

This App is available for iPod, iPhone and iPad. Optimized for iOS6, retina display and iPhone 5. It allows you to share images via email, Twitter and Facebook, or save them to your camera roll (with no watermarks). Share the artist bio via email. Select your favorites. View the images one by one, or enjoy a slideshow.

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746 – 1828) was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker regarded both as the last of the Old Masters and as the first of the moderns. The subversive and imaginative element in his art, as well as his bold handling of paint, provided a model for the work of later generations of artists, from French Romantic painters, to expressionist, modernist and most notably Manet and Picasso.

Throughout his career, Goya produced an enormous oeuvre of paintings, prints, and drawings whose content and tone can be patriotic or subversive, spiritual or satiric, grave or humorous, and anything in between. His themes range from merry festivals for tapestry, draft cartoons, to scenes of war and corpses. This evolution reflects the darkening of his temper. Near the end of his life, he became reclusive and produced frightening and obscure paintings of insanity, madness, and fantasy. The style of these Black Paintings prefigure the expressionist movement.
Goyas work extended over a period of more than 60 years (he draw and paint until his 82nd year). The importance of this factor is evident between his attitude towards life in his youth, when he accepted the world as it was quite happily, in his manhood when he began to criticise it, and in his old age when he became embittered and disillusioned with people and society, as the world changed completely during his lifetime.