Sancho Panza recovers his lost donkey
Oil on canvas. Ca. 1894
In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, a significant number of Spanish writers and artists viewed themselves as heirs to the rich heritage of the Golden Age realist tradition, particularly the work of Miguel de Cervantes and Diego Velázquez. Their interpretation and imitation of those models lent nineteenth-century Spanish naturalism its particular character within the larger context of European literature and visual art. With artists´ concerted adoption of Cervantine references,
ARTWORK