Blind Man's Bluff | |
Image Upright: | 1 |
Other Language 1: | Spanish |
Other Title 1: | La gallina ciega |
Artist: | Francisco Goya |
Year: | 1789 |
Medium: | Oil on Canvas |
Height Metric: | 269 |
Width Metric: | 350 |
Metric Unit: | cm |
Imperial Unit: | in |
Museum: | Museo del Prado |
City: | Madrid |
Blind Man's Bluff (Spanish: La gallina ciega) is one of the Rococo oil-on-linen cartoons produced by the Spanish artist Francisco de Goya for tapestries for the Royal Palace of El Pardo. The painting and the previous skectch are held in the Museo del Prado, in Madrid.[1]
The work shows boys and girls playing the popular pastime "blind man's bluff", with one figure in the middle blindfolded and holding a large spoon while trying to entice others dancing around him in a circle.
The youngsters are dressed as majos and majas, the attire of the humble classes of Spanish society that the aristocrats, like those in this painting, liked to wear. Some of them wear velvet jackets and feathered headdresses, following the fashion of the upper classes from France.
The composition is resolved by alternating the characters between the gaps left by those in the foreground and background, and contrasting the young man who crouches to the right to avoid the ladle and the woman leaning back with another young man leaning forward.
The painting is a decanted exponent of the Rococo style, and its characteristic stylistic features: vivacity, immediacy, curiosity, chromaticism of soft roses, gauze textures in the women's skirts, a luminous landscape background and the reflection of a charming moment of enjoyment of life not without possibilities of flirting.[2] [3]