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Artworks

Ramón Masats, Picadores en la Plaza de toros de las Ventas, Madrid, 1962.

Ramón Masats Spanish, 17/03/1931-4/03/2024

Picadores en la Plaza de toros de las Ventas, Madrid, 1962.
Series: Vintage
Vintage Gelatin Silver Print.
Printed by Ramón Masats.
.
Image: 29 x 19.5 cm / 11 3/8 x 7 5/8 in
Paper: 30.1 x 20.5 cm / 11 7/8 x 8 1/8 in
Frame: 46 x 36 cm / 18 1/8 x 14 1/8 in
.
Stamped and signed by the Artist on verso.
In Picadores en la Plaza de toros de las Ventas, Madrid, made in 1962, Ramón Masats turns the bullring into something more complex than a setting for spectacle: he makes...
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In Picadores en la Plaza de toros de las Ventas, Madrid, made in 1962, Ramón Masats turns the bullring into something more complex than a setting for spectacle: he makes it a threshold between ritual and mystery, between the blinding public arena and the dense, almost secret world that precedes it.


Seen from the shadow of a tunnel, the riders emerge as dark presences, their wide-brimmed hats and embroidered suits reduced to silhouettes that seem at once monumental and fragile. The white burst of light beyond the arch does not reveal the scene; it withholds it, forcing the eye to linger on contour, posture, and suspense rather than on anecdote. In that decision lies Masats’s greatness as one of the central figures of Spanish documentary photography: he does not merely describe a custom, he distills its atmosphere, its tension, and its emotional temperature.


The photograph is rooted in one of the recurring subjects of Masats’s work in the 1950s and 1960s, when he observed Spanish society through its rituals, public ceremonies, labor, leisure, and inherited forms of life with unusual clarity and without sentimentality. Yet this image feels anything but descriptive.


The picadores are not presented as heroic protagonists stepping into glory, but as figures suspended in an instant of concentration, almost swallowed by the architecture that frames them. The tunnel vault presses down like a dark sky, while the opening ahead burns with such intensity that the passage toward the ring becomes nearly metaphysical, as if the men and horses were crossing from the human scale of effort into the abstract space of legend.


Masats understood that photography becomes more powerful when it suggests more than it explains. Here, the corrida is not shown in action; what we receive instead is the solemn breath before exposure, the compact drama of bodies, stone, costume, and light. That restraint is what gives the picture its enduring force: it speaks of Spain, of performance, of discipline, and of collective memory, but it does so through a visual language of shadow and form so precise that the scene remains contemporary, unsettling, and deeply alive.

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