IX

Tonal Techniques: Aquatint

One of the primary methods Goya used to create areas of tone in his prints was dust ground (or dust grain) aquatint. He developed such a command over the technique, he produced several prints including Asta su abuelo (And so was his grandfather) from Los Caprichos solely in aquatint. (See fig. 18).

Francisco GOYA y Lucientes<br/>
<em>And so was his grandfather</em> (1797-1798) <!-- (recto) --><br />
<em>(Asta su abuelo)</em><br />
plate 39 from <i>Los Caprichos (The Caprices)</i> series (1797&ndash;98), published 1799<br />
aquatint printed in sepia ink<br />
20.2 x 14.0 cm (image) 21.4 x 15.2 cm (plate) 25.8 x 18.4 cm (sheet)<br />
1st edition<br />
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne<br />
Felton Bequest, 1976<br />
P1.39-1976<br />

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Fig. 18: Francisco GOYA, Asta su abuelo, (And so was his grandfather), 1797-1798; published 1799, plate 39 from Los Caprichos (The Caprices) series.

Various recipes for aquatint were published in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, but generally they included asphaltum and rosin. Rosin is a solid form of resin obtained primarily from conifers. It is produced by heating fresh liquid resin to vapourize the volatile turpentine components. At room temperature it is solid and brittle, but it melts when heated. The components of aquatint were hand-ground with a pestle and mortar, the particle size varying depending on how much it was ground. Goya may have sifted the dust ground through a muslin bag, gently tapping or shaking it, the more closely it was held to the plate, the more concentrated the resulting layer of dust. Examination of his prints indicates he usually applied aquatint after etching had been completed using a hard ground. His work Disparate de bestia (Brute folly) is likely to have been created by firstly etching to denote the elephant, figures and dark surrounds on the plate. (See fig. 19). This would have been done with stopping out varnish on the plate in the oval-shaped area surrounding the elephant that appears white in the print. Once the lines were etched, the hard ground would be removed from the copperplate by rubbing with a rag and cleaning the plate to the point where a slightly greasy film remained on the surface providing a slight tackiness for the aquatint to adhere to.

Francisco GOYA y Lucientes<br/>
<em>Brute folly</em> 1816-1823; 1877 {published} <!-- (recto) --><br />
<em>(Disparate de bestia)</em><br />
additonal plate from <i>Los Disparates (The follies)</i>, 1864<br />
etching and aquatint in dark umber ink<br />
25.4 x 36.0 cm (plate) 28.0 x 38.6 cm (sheet)<br />
proof before letters<br />
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne<br />
Felton Bequest, 1982<br />
P3-1983<br />

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Fig. 19: Francisco GOYA, Disparate de bestia (Brute folly), 1816-1823; published 1877, additional plate from Los Disparates (The follies), 1864.

A more novel and expedient method of applying aquatint Goya may have been familiar with, was to use a hairdresser’s powder machine and timber box as described in J.H. Green’s aquatint treatise:

“Get a deal box, with a lid rather larger than the plate it is to contain, and about six inches deep; at one end , make a circular hole, to receive the small end of a hair-dresser’s powder machine, which you must partially fill with resin, finely pulverized and sifted: the plate being laid with the face upwards in the box, cover it close to keep out the air; apply the machine to the hole, and work it the same manner that a hair-dresser uses it, until the plate is entirely covered.”37

<br/>
&copy;The British Library Board
Fig. 20: James GILLRAY, Making Decent, from ‘The Caricatures of Gillray; with historical and political illustrations, biographical anecdotes and notices’, estimated date 1818, British Library. The brown powder machine is held by the hairdresser standing behind the figure with powder billowing around him.

Goya sometimes applied aquatint in liquid form, by mixing the dry ingredients with alcohol and applying this ‘spirit ground’ to the copperplate with a brush.40 Whether in powder of liquid form, aquatint was secured to the copperplate by heating which caused the tiny granules to melt, fusing them to the surface. All the areas of the plate covered by the melted ground were subsequently protected when the plate was exposed to the acid, but the little areas between the melted grains were vulnerable, and these were etched to form passages of reticulated pitting, the coarser the grain the larger the pits, and the finer the smaller the pits.38 While the NGV collection does not include any of Goya’s copperplates, it does contain plates produced by other artists such as Lionel Lindsay which are very helpful for understanding aquatinting. (See figs. 21, 22 and 23).

Fig 21: Lionel LINDSAY, Etching plate for Ladies of Spain, with aquatint, NGV Collection.
Lionel LINDSAY, Etching plate for <em>Ladies of Spain</em>, detail showing etched lines and three stages of aquatint biting. The deepest, with the largest pits is on the right, NGV Collection.<br/>
Fig. 22: Lionel LINDSAY, Etching plate for Ladies of Spain, detail showing etched lines and three stages of aquatint biting. The deepest, with the largest pits is on the right, NGV Collection.
Fig. 23: Lionel LINDSAY, Etching plate for Ladies of Spain, detail, viewed under raking light, showing a finer grain aquatint was used for the face, NGV Collection.

Goya sometimes used different sized grains in the same print. For example, Disparate de miedo (Folly of Fear) has larger white dots randomly dispersed in the sky region that look like stars which were caused by larger granules of aquatint.39 (See fig. 24). Coarsely ground aquatint has also been used in the upper right corner.

Francisco GOYA y Lucientes<br/>
<em>Folly of fear</em> (c. 1815-1819) <!-- (recto) --><br />
<em>(Disparate de miedo)</em><br />
plate 2 from <i>Los Disparates (The Follies)</i> series (c. 1815&ndash;19), published 1864<br />
etching, burnished aquatint and drypoint<br />
22.0 x 31.9 cm (image) 24.5 x 35.2 cm (plate) 33.0 x 52.1 cm (sheet)<br />
1st edition<br />
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne<br />
Felton Bequest, 1981<br />
P23.2-1981<br />

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Fig. 24: Francisco GOYA, Disparate de miedo, (Folly of fear), c. 1819-1824; published 1864, plate 2 from Los Disparates (The follies), c. 1819-1824, 1st edition.

When it came time to ink the plate in preparation for printing, each pit would hold ink while the areas that had been protected by the aquatint would not. The ridges around the depressed pits of aquatint are vulnerable to wear as more impressions are pulled from the plate. The background region of Disparate volante (Flying Folly) has a mottled, indistinct appearance rather than a reticulated tonal appearance due to the aquatint becoming worn. (See fig. 25).

Francisco GOYA y Lucientes<br/>
<em>Flying folly</em> (c. 1815-1819) <!-- (recto) --><br />
<em>(Disparate volante)</em><br />
plate 5 from <i>Los Disparates (The Follies)</i> series (c. 1815&ndash;19), published 1864<br />
etching and aquatint<br />
21.7 x 32.6 cm (image) 24.4 x 35.2 cm (plate) 33.0 x 50.2 cm (sheet)<br />
1st edition<br />
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne<br />
Felton Bequest, 1981<br />
P23.5-1981<br />

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Fig 25: Francisco GOYA, Disparate volante, (Flying folly), c. 1819-1824; published 1864
plate 5 from Los Disparates (The follies), c.1819-24, 1st edition.
37.

This was undoubtedly the forerunner to the modern-day aquatint box. J.H. Green, op.cit., p.8. The hair powder machine was a conical-shaped apparatus made of leather or silk and wires. It operated like an accordion and the end that dispersed the powder was covered in a fine mesh so the powder would be scattered as a fine dust. https://www.geriwalton.com/hair-powder-history-of-its-popularity-and-unpopularity/#_ftn10, accessed 25 May 2021. Bellows were also sometimes adapted for this purpose.

38.

Another method of applying aquatint was to dissolve the dust ground components in alcohol so the resulting solution could be blown onto the surface of the copperplate with a mouth spray. Tomas Harris, op.cit., p.25.

39.

M. King, interview, 3 May 2021

40.

When the alcohol evaporated, it left the behind grains. This method of application resulted in a more even dispersal of grains and hence a more uniform dispersal of pits was achieved in the copperplate. Elisabetta Polidori (2014) ’Materials and Techniques ‘in Goya Order & Disorder, p.354.