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Artworks

Ramón Masats, Museo Del Prado, Madrid, 1965.

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

Museo Del Prado, Madrid, 1965.
Unique Vintage Gelatin Silver Print.
Printed by Ramón Masats.
.
Image: 23.5 x 19.5 cm / 9 1/4 x 7 5/8 in
Paper: 25 x 20.5 cm / 9 7/8 x 8 1/8 in
.
Multiple annotation hand written by the artist on the verso.
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The Museum's Gaze: Masats at the Prado, 1965 Ramón Masats understood something fundamental about photography's relationship to painting. His 1965 vintage gelatin silver print from the Museo del Prado doesn't...
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The Museum's Gaze: Masats at the Prado, 1965


Ramón Masats understood something fundamental about photography's relationship to painting. His 1965 vintage gelatin silver print from the Museo del Prado doesn't simply document visitors encountering Velázquez—it stages a meditation on looking itself.


This unique print emerges from a pivotal moment when Spanish photography was shedding its pictorialist past. Masats, central to the AFAL movement's documentary revolution, found in the Prado's halls a perfect metaphor for his own medium's anxieties. Where Velázquez's “Las Meninas” had questioned representation's limits three centuries earlier, Masats' camera now interrogated the museum as a space where art and life converge.


The timing matters. Franco's Spain in 1965 was cautiously opening to the world, and photography was becoming a vehicle for subtle cultural critique. Masats' "poetic documentation" captured not just what people saw, but how they saw—the rituals of cultural consumption, the performance of appreciation, the democracy of the gaze.


In this photograph, the museum becomes a camera obscura where past and present collide. Visitors stand before masterworks, but Masats reminds us that they too are being observed, framed, and preserved. The photograph's power lies not in its documentary function but in its reflexivity—it's an image about imagemaking, a frame within frames.


This work represents Masats at his most conceptually sophisticated, just before his turn to filmmaking. It suggests that photography's greatest subject might be vision itself—how we look, why we look, and what looking does to both observer and observed. The museum, with its controlled lighting and hushed reverence, becomes photography's perfect double: a space where reality is carefully curated, where the past speaks to the present through the medium of light.

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