Francisco Javier de Larumbe y Rodríguez

Francisco Javier de Larumbe y Rodríguez

  • 1787
  • Oil on canvas
  • 113 x 77 cm
  • Cat. P_137
  • Commissioned from the artist by the Banco Nacional de San Carlos in 1786
By:
Manuela Mena

In musical terms, the three portraits for Banco de San Carlos in which Goya presents figures of more than half-length standing behind a stone parapet could be considered “variations on a single theme.” No two are alike, nor do they truly resemble the artist’s other works in this genre, which was new to him in the 1780s. The modifications he applies in his depiction of each of the three models, all prominent figures, draw the viewer inexorably into an analysis of the reasons behind each variation—some very subtle, such as the different curls in their wigs—and the manner in which Goya manages to plumb the depths of their respective personalities and characters in the context of a repeated scheme. The colouring is different in each, not only in the clothing but also, and more importantly, in the sitters’ skin tones and the reflections of the light on the gold and silver embroidery or the unassuming buttons on Zambrano’s frock coat, which lead the eye towards their expressive faces.

The portrait of Larumbe (Santiago de Compostela, 1730 – Madrid, c. 1796) was the last of this type for the bank, whose archives document payment on 15 October 1787: “R.on [reales de vellón] 2,200 paid to the painter Fran.co Goya... for the portrait he has made of D. Fran.co Xabier de Larumbe, who was honorary director of monetary transfers at the National Bank.” Larumbe was also in charge of victuals and clothing for the Royal Armies and the Royal Navy, which were contracted by the bank itself, and he wrote reports on other subjects too thanks to a brilliant analytical capacity honed at Salamanca University, where he became vicerector after completing law studies there. In Seville, he served as war commissioner, as had his father, and he also founded the Real Sociedad Económica Patriótica (Royal Patriotic Economic Society). It was in that context that Pablo de Olavide asked him to study the textile industry and its possible development, and that he acted as royal sub-delegate to the Riotinto mines. Unlike Zambrano, who was a shrewd businessman but not especially interested in culture, Larumbe was a renowned intellectual and, like his close friend Gaspar Melchor de Jovellanos, a theatre lover. He was also a member of the Real Academia Sevillana de Buenas Letras (Royal Sevillian Academy of Belles-Lettres). This probably explains the position of his right hand in the present portrait, which is thrust in between the buttons of his vest in what was then a sign of dedication to study. After Olavide’s fall from grace, Larumbe was sent to San Roque as war commissioner. His friendship with Jovellanos dated from the time he had spent in Seville, and at his new assignment, Larumbe honoured it by caring for his friend’s younger brother, Gregorio de Jovellanos, a frigate lieutenant wounded at the battle of Cape Saint Vincent between the English and Spanish fleets. Larumbe’s letter informing his friend of his brother’s death clearly reveals their mutual affection and Larumbe’s humane spirit: “[…] charity obliged me to take him in, because I was moved by the state he was in when I saw him […] I have done nothing […] I felt compassion at the sorry state I saw him in. Mindful of our close friendship, I felt I would fail it and charity itself if I did not take him in and help in every possible way […] I paid no heed to my own discomfort, day and night, to aid him as if he were my own brother.” Larumbe moved to Madrid in 1783 on his own merits, but Jovellanos’s gratitude undoubtedly earned him the post of director at the bank, as well as the Order of Charles III, whose insignia appears discreetly on his chest.

Unlike the other two portraits of the same type, the sitter looks to the right. Goya captures his most intimate character: an absent, self-absorbed gaze reveals that he is considering a problem, some difficult aspect of his work, and how to solve it. Barely aware of the tranquil setting in which the artist works before his easel, he is nonetheless thankful that it allows him to think without having to attend to other matters. Here, Goya uses a lighter background than in the other two portraits, and its great luminosity imbues the space with a sense of movement reinforced by the outstretched arm and the grip of the hand on the bank directors’ staff.

Manuela Mena

 
By:
Manuela Mena
Francisco de Goya y Lucientes
Fuendetodos (Zaragoza) 1746 - Bordeaux (France) 1828

The name appearing on his baptismal documents is Francisco Joseph Goya, but in 1783 he added the word “de” to his surname, and that is how he signed his self-portrait in the Caprichos when they were published in 1799: “Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, Pintor.” At 53, he was at the height of his career and social standing, and in October he was appointed First Court Painter by the monarchs. From a young age Goya had wanted to find the documents certifying his nobility in the Zaragoza archives, but he never did. Success as an artist was slow in coming, despite the fact that he had begun studying painting at the age of 13. This was in José Luzán’s studio, although in 1762 he was already attempting to obtain a grant that the Royal Academy of San Fernando awarded to young men from the provinces so they could study in Madrid. The following year he attempted to obtain the firstclass Painting Prize, but neither of these efforts was successful. A few years later, in 1769 — probably after living between Zaragoza and Madrid, where he may have studied at Bayeu’s studio — he decided to pay his own way to Italy. And in 1771, he was equally unsuccessful in his attempts to obtain the prize of the Academy of Parma. From Italy, he returned to Zaragoza, where he must have had some kind of support, because that year he painted a fresco in the choir at the Basilica of El Pilar. In 1773, he married Francisco Bayeu’s sister, and this was decisive in his move to Madrid in 1775, where his brother-in-law had invited him to collaborate on a project to paint cartoons for tapestries to be hung in the royal palaces. This marked the beginning of his slow rise in courtly circles over the following years.

In 1780, at the age of 32, Goya was elected Academician of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando, for which he presented Christ on the Cross (Museo del Prado, Madrid). At the same time, the chapter of the Basilica of El Pilar commissioned him to paint a fresco on the dome of the Regina Martyrum. The Count of Floridablanca’s support was also decisive for his career in the early 1780s. After painting his portrait in 1783, Goya was commissioned to make one of the paintings for the church of San Francisco el Grande. It seems very likely that Floridablanca also recommended his services to the Infante Don Luis and his family in 1783 and 1784, as well as to Banco de San Carlos for the portraits of its directors. In 1785, Goya was assistant director of painting at the Academy of San Fernando, and in 1786 he was finally appointed the King’s Painter. The following year, he obtained the patronage of the Duke and Duchess of Osuna and soon thereafter, that of the Count and Countess of Altamira. Goya was 43 years old when Charles IV came to the throne in 1789, and he was soon appointed court painter by the new monarch. By then, only one of his six children was still alive. Goya was still painting tapestry cartoons for the king at that time, but over the following ten years, his life and his approach to art were to change radically. This transformation may have begun with the grave illness that left him deaf in 1793. That is when be began to make independent works, such as the “diversiones nacionales” (“National Pastimes”) that he presented at the Academy in 1794, or the series of drawings and subsequent prints known as Los Caprichos. He also continued to respond to commissions for religious works, but the results were filled with such unprecedented innovations that they are considered even more revolutionary than his work in other genres. His canvases for La Santa Cueva in Cádiz (1796) and The Arrest of Christ, which Cardinal Lorenzana commissioned for the sacristy at Toledo Cathedral (1798), are fine examples. Goya’s fame is also due to his portraits of the Spanish elite from the monarchs to the leading aristocrats, including the Duke and Duchess of Alba, as well as outstanding cultural, military and political figures from that period, such as Jovellanos, Urrutia, Moratín and Godoy. This work culminated in 1800 with his portrait of the Countess of Chinchón and The Family of Charles IV (Museo del Prado, Madrid), as well as others that paved the way to modernity, such as his version of Venus as a nude model in the Majas (Museo del Prado, Madrid).

With the arrival of the new century, Goya and all his compatriots were affected by the war against Napoleon. His testimony is some of the most impressive of all — a deeply critical view marked by his reflections on violence in such works as Desastres de la Guerra (The Disasters of War) or, in 1814, his Second and Third of May, 1808 (Museo del Prado, Madrid). His portraits offer a view of the new society, including its aristocratic patrons, such as the Marchioness of Santa Cruz, the Marchioness of Villafranca Painting her Husband and, from 1816, the Tenth Duke of Osuna (Musée Bonnat, Bayonne), as well as the new bourgeoisie, with likenesses of Teresa Sureda (National Gallery, Washington), his own son and daughterin- law, Javier Goya and Gumersinda Goicoechea (Noailles collection, France), and the actress Antonia Zárate. Before and after the war, Goya continued with his series of drawings and prints, including Tauromaquia and his Disparates, which dates from the years when the Constitution of 1812 was abolished. These culminate in the Black Paintings on the walls of his own house.

Goya’s portrait of Ferdinand VII is one of those that most clearly convey its model’s character, and this king’s repression was almost certainly the reason why the artist left for France in 1824, following the arrival of the Hundred Thousand Sons of Saint Louis in Madrid that May. After a stay in Paris in July and August, where he visited that year’s Salon, he settled definitively in Bordeaux. His work from the final years of his life contained many innovations, including the use of lithography for a new series of four prints called Bulls of Bordeaux, and the miniatures he painted on ivory, with subjects that also appear in his drawings from those years. There, he offers a broad view of contemporary society, mixed with his memories and experiences, all marked by his permanent desire to fully explore human nature.

Manuela Mena

 
By:
Paloma Gómez Pastor
Francisco Javier de Larumbe (Santiago de Compostela 1730 - Madrid 1796)

He studied in Salamanca, where he read logic, physics and mathematics for three years at the Royal College of the Society of Jesus before graduating in law from the University in 1854. He was a vice-rector, a deputy and a member of the Academy of Jurists. After competing for professorial chairs in the Legal Code at this university and that of Valladolid, he chose to follow his father’s political career in the Royal Military Revenue, and he was appointed War Commissioner in 1763.

He lived in Seville, where his father was the royal representative in the city and superintendent of Andalusia. There he was inducted as an honorary member to the city’s Royal Academy of Belles-Lettres (1762), took part in Olavide’s discussion groups, and became involved with the work of the Sevillian Economic Society. He was the prototype of the Enlightenment man, playing an active role in Seville’s cultural life with the help of Olavide and Jovellanos.

Olavide gave him the task of administering the guilds of Seville. This he performed efficiently, drafting an important report on the need to “foment credit for the arts and esteem for artisans” in line with Bernardo Ward’s proposal in the Proyecto Económico (Economic Project) of 1762, and supporting Jovellanos’s campaign to create weaving schools in Seville to revitalise the textile industry, especially silk.

Following the death of his parents, the imprisonment, trial and condemnation of Olavide between 1776 and 1778, and the departure of Jovellanos for Madrid, he fell into a period of self-neglect from which he managed to emerge after his later marriage to Catalina de Urreta y Larumbe. After playing a part in the establishment of the Andalusian saltpetre factories, he was sent in 1783 to Madrid, where he entered the Order of Charles III.

On 27 December 1784, he was appointed a biennial director of Banco de San Carlos by royal designation. Throughout 1785 and 1786, he was in charge of ensuring supplies, victuals and clothing for the Army and Navy, part of the bank’s registered duties, in the regions of Old Castile, New Castile, Vizcaya, Navarre, Burgos and Santander. After the attacks on Cabarrús, the creator of the bank and its director in 1782, he sided with the Marquis of Hormazas, Jovellanos and the Duke of Híjar, defending Cabarrús, his conduct and his selfless dedication to the bank. In 1778, he was promoted to the rank of organising commissioner. He died in Madrid in about 1796.

Paloma Gómez Pastor

 
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