Publication

Goya Saturn painting findings presented at 5th ICSHA conference

Goya Saturn painting findings presented at 5th ICSHA conference

Posted by CRS Staff on July 22, 2023 for the OMNIKA project

The CRS is delighted to announce that an OMNIKA-sponsored publication will be presented at the 5th International Conference on Social Sciences, Humanities and Arts (ICSHA) from December 1–3, 2023, in Paris, France. The ICSHA conference is one of the most prestigious social sciences conferences in the world. The title of the double-blind peer reviewed conference paper is When Art Betrays Mythology: Acquitting Cronus (Κρόνος) in Goya's Saturn by Boban Dedović. In it, the author provides new, compelling mythological evidence to argue that Goya's famous Saturn painting actually depicts the monster named Grendel from the Anglo-Saxon epic poem named Beowulf. This work applies research findings from OMNIKA's mythology index and psycholinguistics. In doing so, it demonstrates how the core focus of the CRS provides unique insight into human mentality–both ancient and modern. The full video presentation is provided below as well as on YouTube.

Full paper

Publication

Title

When Art Betrays Mythology: Acquitting Cronus (Κρόνος) in Goya's Saturn

By Boban Dedović on July 6, 2023
Keywords
Francisco de GoyaSaturn Devouring His SonMythologyCronusHesiod's TheogonyBeowulfGrendelNowell CodexCotton Vitellius A XV
Abstract

Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes (1746-1828) was a famous Spanish painter who is credited with painting a work titled Saturn Devouring One of His Sons. This work was one of over ten others known as the “Black Paintings,” which were painted on the walls of his Quinta home in Spain. The painting’s contents have been widely accepted as depicting a deity named Saturn, whose Greek equivalent is Cronus (Κρόνος). It is widely believed that the painting depicts a passage from the Greek mythological story known as the Theogony, attributed to Hesiod (ca. 700 BCE). The title and attribution stated above were assigned posthumously, not by Goya himself. No other authorship sources seem to be available. Prior investigations have relied on psychological inferences about Goya. The present investigation conducted an exhaustive literature review and then compared the painting's contents to Greek and English versions of Hesiod's Theogony. All three posited hypotheses were supported: (a) prior investigators seemed to rely on psychological analyses concerned with Goya’s mental state, despite a lack of objective evidence from the time period in question; (b) textual evidence from Hesiod’s Theogony did not provide support for Cronus being the figure depicted in the Saturn painting, and; (c) Grendel’s depiction in Beowulf aligned with the Saturn painting’s contents, textually and graphically. Further probing was conducted with regard to whether Goya could have profited from the materials and concepts found in the manuscript during his lifetime. The Beowulf manuscript was available to an artist between 1820-1823, and the plot of Beowulf was written about in European publications. Finally, the Beowulf manuscript’s contents included the Biblical story of Judith and Beowulf in the same spine, which corresponds to the adjacent location of the Judith and Saturn paintings in Goya’s Quinta home. Implications and limitations are discussed.

Full presentation video

Disclosures: Partial funding for this research publication and its contents was provided by the OMNIKA Foundation, a Nevada-based 501(c)(3) nonprofit managed under the auspices of the Consciousness Research Society (CRS). Boban Dedović is a psycholinguist who serves as the Executive Director of the OMNIKA Foundation as of this writing. Article copyright © 2023 Boban Dedović, some rights reserved.