Date: Fri 20-Nov-1998
Date: Fri 20-Nov-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: LIZAM
Quick Words:
Goya
Full Text:
Monks Unveil Goya's Frescos
ZARAGOZA, SPAIN (AP) -- More women can now view seven frescos of the Virgin
Mary painted 200 years ago by Francisco Goya at the Aula Dei monastery.
On November 11, Queen Sofia opened a special passageway built in the Sixteenth
Century wine cellar of the monastery in northeastern Spain near Zaragoza.
"The idea was to allow women, as well as men, to see the frescos without
disturbing the monastic order," said Rosa Pellicero, a local government
spokeswoman.
Before the special passageway, only three women -- another member of the royal
family, a judicial secretary and a female restorer -- had seen the frescos
painted in the chapel by a 28-year-old Goya in 1774.
The monks, who belong to the Roman Catholic Cartesian order and follow strict
sex-segregation norms dating back 900 years, agreed to the passageway after
the Goya bicentenary celebrations in 1996 brought unwanted attention to their
ban on women.
Not that the old Spanish master's frescos will suddenly be unveiled to all.
Visits have to be booked, and with just one showing every month, reservations
are full until February.