Still Life of a Lamb's Head and Flanks (Spanish: Bodegón con costillas, lomo y cabeza de cordero) or A Butcher's Counter (Spanish: Trozos de Carnero) is an [1]still-life oil painting by Francisco Goya, from c. 1808–1812. It has been in the collection of the Louvre, in Paris, since 1909.
The painting is one of a series of 12 still lifes of dead or butchered animals that Goya painted during Spain's war with Napoleon[2]. Made at the same time as the artist's The Disasters of War, the paintings are noted for their departure from traditional still lifes[2]. Scholars suggest that the paintings from this series evoke the death and violence Spain witnessed at that time[3].