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goya

n. bitter melon (qualifier: edible fruit, especially as it is eaten by Okinawans)

Wikipedia
Goya (disambiguation)

Francisco Goya (1746–1828) was a Spanish romantic painter and printmaker.

Goya may also refer to:

Goya (band)

Goya – Polish pop music group. Founded 1995 in Warsaw, Poland.

Goya (moth)

Goya is a genus of snout moths. It was described by Ragonot in 1888.

Goya (crater)

Goya is a crater on Mercury. It has a diameter of 135 kilometers. Its name was adopted by the International Astronomical Union in 1976. Goya is named for the Spanish artist Francisco Goya, who lived from 1746 to 1828.

Goya (surname)

Goya is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:

  • Chantal Goya (born 1942), French singer and actress
  • Estanislao Goya (born 1988), Argentine professional golfer
  • Francis Goya (born 1946), born Francis Weyer, Belgian romantic guitarist and composer
  • Francisco Goya (1746–1828), Spanish romantic painter and printmaker
  • Nand Lal Goya (1633–1713), Persian and Arabic poet in the Punjab region
  • Safeway Goya, born Fred de Rafols, American musician, lead singer of The Nobodys
  • Tito Goya (1951–1985), Puerto Rican actor
Goya (Madrid Metro)

Goya is a station on Line 2 and Line 4 of the Madrid Metro.

Goya (Madrid)

Goya is a ward (barrio) of Madrid belonging to the district of Salamanca.

Category:Wards of Madrid Category:Salamanca (Madrid)

Usage examples of "goya".

Apart from the fact that he is a great and, one might say, uniquely original artist, Goya is significant as being, in his Later Works, the almost perfect type of the man who knows only sorrow and not the ending of sorrow.

In spite of his virulent anti-clericalism, Goya contrived to remain on sufficiently good terms with the Church to receive periodical commissions to paint religious pictures.

Realistically or in fantastic allegories, with a technical mastery that only increased as he grew older, Goya recorded it all -- not only the agonies endured by his people at the hands of the invaders, but also the follies and crimes committed by these same people in their dealings with one another.

The lack of this power is already conspicuous in the tapestry cartoons, of which the best are invariably those in which Goya does his composing in terms of silhouetted masses and the worst those in which he attempts to organize a collection of figures distributed all over the canvas.

The attempt is not successful, and in spite of its power and the beauty of its component parts, the picture as a whole is less satisfying as a composition, and for that reason less moving as a story, than is the companion piece, in which Goya arranges his figures in a series of sharply delimited balancing groups, dramatically contrasted with one another and the background.

Fortunately, in the etchings, Goya is very seldom tempted to talk in anything else.

But within the field that he chose to cultivate -- that the idiosyncrasies of his temperament and the quality of his artistic sensibilities compelled him to choose -- Goya remains incomparable.

Among the great painters only Goya has chosen to treat of death, and then only of death by violence, death in war.

Standing under the Goya, like a general about to detail a plan of attack which others would have to execute, he developed his proposal.

Fleur, beneath the Goya, was boiling a silver kettle, and burning pastilles.

And before Goya you have to go back to the mediaeval chaps who did the gargoyles and chimaeras on Notre Dame and Mont Saint-Michel.

A locked portfolio, bound in tanned human skin, held certain unknown and unnameable drawings which it was rumored Goya had perpetrated but dared not acknowledge.

It seemed as though at some turn in the path they would run into Goya, sitting before his easel, scowling ill-naturedly at some dainty duchess who was serving as his model.

A work of fiction should carry the hall mark of its author as surely as a Goya, a Daumier, a Velasquez, and a Mathew Maris, should be the unmistakable creations of those masters.

They included works of, among others, Rembrandt, Rubens, Hals, Vermeer, Velazquez, Murillo, Goya, Vecchio, Watteau, Fragonard, Reynolds and Gainsborough.