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AIDMMA_.49.7.41}~
OTYPaintings}~
OTG}~
OTNDon Manuel Osorio Manrique de Zuñiga (1784-1792)}~
MET50 x 40 in. (127 x 101.6 cm)}~
OMG}~
OMDOil on canvas}~
CRG}~
CRT Francisco de Goya y Lucientes}~
CRNGoya y Lucientes, Francisco de}~
CRCSpanish}~
CDTSpanish, 1746-1828}~
CRRArtist}~
OCG}~
OCTpossibly 1790s}~
CXG}~
CXD<P>This portrait represents the son of the conde de Altamira.
Outfitted in a splendid red costume, Don Manuel is shown playing with
a pet magpie (which holds the painter's calling card in its beak), a cage
full of finches, and three wide-eyed cats. In Christian art birds frequently
symbolize the soul, and in Baroque art caged birds are symbolic of innocence.
Goya may have intended this portrait as an illustration of the frail boundaries
that separate the child's world from the forces of evil or as a commentary
on the fleeting nature of innocence and youth. </P> <P>The
picture is one of several portraits commissioned by the Altamiras after
Goya was appointed painter to the king (1786). It may have been executed
after the child's death in 1792, since the imagery and sinister undertone
seem more characteristic of Goya's works of the 1790s.</P>}~
OOG}~
OONThe Metropolitan Museum of Art}~
OOPNew York, New York, USA}~
OOA49.7.41}~
OOCThe Jules Bache Collection, 1949}~
ORG}~
ORLhttp://www.metmuseum.org/}~
RIG}~
RIPY}~
RIDFull view}~
RIRHasFormat}~
RILMMA_.ep49.7.41.R.tif}~
AVD20000629}~
AVV1.2}~
ALY2000}~
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