MADRID.- For a period of three months, Room 34 of the
Prados Villanueva Building will be displaying Goyas portrait of Don Pedro de Alcántara Téllez-Girón y Pacheco, 9th Duke of Osuna, one of the most interesting works by the artist among those housed in the Frick Collection in New York.
The special loan of this work falls within the context of the Museums Invited Work programme, an activity sponsored by the Fundación Amigos del Museo del Prado since 2010 with the aim of further enriching a visit to the Museum and establishing points of comparison that allow for a reflection on the works in the Prados Permanent Collection.
Traditionally dated to around 1798, the recent cleaning of the portrait at the Metropolitan Museum in New York has revealed a complexity of technique and use of colour that may allow it to be dated later, possibly even to after the Dukes death in 1807.
While the sitters clothing corresponds to the late 1790s, the dark tonality and manner of painting the dress coat and hands are closer to Goyas technique during the period of the Peninsular War. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that the work does not appear in the records of the Osuna residence in which purchases made in the 18th century are rigorously recorded, but it does however appear in the sale of the Osuna collection in 1896. It is also possible that this is the portrait referred to in an inventory of the collection of around 1834 as an oil painting of half-length of the Duke of Osuna, grandfather.
This information seems to indicate that the portrait was commissioned during a turbulent period, possibly at the time when the Osuna family moved to Cadiz after the Dukes death and prior to the French invasion.
In Goyas image the Duke transmits the sensitive, enthusiastic personality that made him a popular figure among intellectuals of the time. The dimensions of the work, which are similar to those of the portrait of the Duchess of 1786 (Marita March collection), the Dukes pose and the direction of his gaze all suggest that Goya probably painted it from a miniature and that it was used as a pair to the portrait of the Duchess.
Don Pedro de Alcántara Téllez-Girón y Pacheco, 9th Duke of Osuna (1755-1807) was one of Goyas earliest and most eminent patrons from the mid-1780s onwards. After his death the artist continued to work for his wife and children until 1817. The Prado has various works painted by Goya for the Osunas, including the group portrait of the entire family of 1785, those of the Marchioness of Santa Cruz (1805) and the Duchess of Abrantes (1816), and the unique Witches Flight, one of the scenes of witches from the series that Goya sold to the Duke in 1798.