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Juan Barjola

Auction Lot 40047269
JUAN BARJOLA (Torre de Miguel Sesmero, Badajoz, 1919 – Madrid, 2004).
“Bullfighting.”
Oil on canvas.
Signed in the lower right corner.
Measurements: 65 x 81 cm; 87 x 103 cm (frame).

Open live auction
Estimated Value : 20,000 - 22,000 €
Live auction: 14 Jul 2026
Live auction: 14 Jul 2026 15:00
Remaining time: 18 days 21:00:52
Processing lot please standby
Next bid: 16000

BID HISTORY

DESCRIPTION

JUAN BARJOLA (Torre de Miguel Sesmero, Badajoz, 1919 – Madrid, 2004).
“Bullfighting.”
Oil on canvas.
Signed in the lower right corner.
Measurements: 65 x 81 cm; 87 x 103 cm (frame).
Bullfighting occupies a central place in Juan Barjola’s artistic career, constituting one of the most recurring and personal themes in his body of work. However, his approach to the world of bullfighting departs from the tradition of costumbrismo or the anecdotal depiction of the bullfight. For Barjola, the bullfight becomes a powerful metaphor for the human condition—a stage where life and death, violence and sacrifice, instinct and reason clash.
From the late 1950s and, especially, throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the artist created numerous works inspired by the world of bullfighting. These works feature bulls, bullfighters, horses, and human figures subjected to intense expressive distortions. The bullring ceases to be a recognizable space and is transformed into a dramatic setting where bodies and animals merge in an atmosphere of tension and conflict. This vision connects with postwar European Expressionist movements and with Barjola’s concern for depicting the violence inherent in the human experience.
The influence of bullfighting on his work must also be understood in relation to the Spanish artistic tradition. Like Francisco de Goya and Pablo Picasso, Barjola found in the bull a symbol of extraordinary visual and cultural power. However, while Goya explored the popular and dramatic dimensions of the bullfight and Picasso transformed it into a repertoire of personal forms and symbols, Barjola emphasized its tragic and existential nature. His bulls frequently appear as creatures that are both powerful and vulnerable, enveloped in a violence that transcends the specific bullfighting event.
Formally, the bullfighting scenes allowed him to develop some of the most recognizable characteristics of his artistic language: energetic brushstrokes, intense colors, strong chromatic hallmarks, and marked anatomical distortion. The fragmentation of the figures and the expressiveness of their gestures create images of great emotional impact, in which movement and dramatic tension take center stage.

COMMENTS

This lot can be seen at the Setdart Madrid Gallery located at C/Velázquez, 7.

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