Francis Bacon (artist)

Last updated

This is for the artist. For the English philosopher, see Francis Bacon.

Contents

Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon by John Dekin.jpg
Born(1909-10-28)28 October 1909
Dublin, Ireland
Died28 April 1992(1992-04-28) (aged 82)
Madrid, Spain
OccupationPainter
Works Full list

Francis Bacon (28 October 1909 – 28 April 1992) was an Irish-born Britishfigurative painter known for his raw, unsettling imagery. Focusing on the human form, his subjects included crucifixions, portraits of popes, self-portraits, and portraits of close friends, with abstracted figures sometimes isolated in geometrical structures.

He said that he saw images "in series", and his work, which numbers in the region of 590 extant paintings along with many others he destroyed, [1] typically focused on a single subject for sustained periods, often in triptych or diptych formats. His output can be broadly described as sequences or variations on single motifs; including the 1930s Picasso-influenced bio-morphs and Furies, the 1940s male heads isolated in rooms or geometric structures, the 1950s "screaming popes," the mid-to-late 1950s animals and lone figures, the early 1960s crucifixions, the mid-to-late 1960s portraits of friends, the 1970s self-portraits, and the cooler, more technical 1980s paintings.

Bacon did not begin to paint until his late twenties, having drifted in the late 1920s and early 1930s as an interior decorator, bon vivant and gambler. [2] He said that his artistic career was delayed because he spent too long looking for subject matter that could sustain his interest. His breakthrough came with the 1944 triptych Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion , which sealed his reputation as a uniquely bleak chronicler of the human condition. From the mid-1960s, he mainly produced portraits of friends and drinking companions, either as single, diptych or triptych panels. Following the suicide of his lover George Dyer in 1971 (memorialised in his Black Triptychs, and a number of posthumous portraits), his art became more sombre, inward-looking and preoccupied with the passage of time and death. The climax of his later period is marked by the masterpieces Study for Self-Portrait (1982) and Study for a Self-Portrait—Triptych, 1985–86 .

Despite his existentialist and bleak outlook, Bacon was charismatic, articulate and well-read. A bon vivant, he spent his middle age eating, drinking and gambling in London's Soho with like-minded friends including Lucian Freud (although they fell out in the mid-1970s, for reasons neither ever explained), John Deakin, Muriel Belcher, Henrietta Moraes, Daniel Farson, Tom Baker and Jeffrey Bernard. After Dyer's suicide, he largely distanced himself from this circle, and while still socially active and his passion for gambling and drinking continued, he settled into a platonic and somewhat fatherly relationship with his eventual heir, John Edwards.

Since his death, Bacon's reputation has grown steadily, and his work is among the most acclaimed, expensive and sought-after on the art market. In the late 1990s, a number of major works, previously assumed destroyed, [3] including early 1950s pope paintings and 1960s portraits, re-emerged to set record prices at auction.

Biography

Francis Bacon's birthplace at 63 Baggot Street, Dublin Francis Bacon's birthplace at 63 Baggot Street Dublin.jpg
Francis Bacon's birthplace at 63 Baggot Street, Dublin

Early life

Francis Bacon was born on 28 October 1909 in 63 Lower Baggot Street in Dublin. [4] At that time, all of Ireland was still part of the United Kingdom. His father, Army Captain Anthony Edward "Eddy" Mortimer Bacon, was born in Adelaide, South Australia, to an English father and an Australian mother. [5] Eddy was a veteran of the Second Boer War, a racehorse trainer, and the grandson of Major-General Anthony Bacon, who claimed descent from Sir Nicholas Bacon, elder half-brother of Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Albans, who is better known as "Sir Francis Bacon", the Elizabethan statesman, philosopher, and essayist. [6] Bacon's mother, Christina Winifred "Winnie" Firth, was heiress to a Sheffield steel business and coal mine. He had an older brother, Harley, [7] two younger sisters, Ianthe and Winifred, and a younger brother, Edward.

Bacon was raised by the family nanny, Jessie Lightfoot, from Cornwall, known as "Nanny Lightfoot", a maternal figure who remained close to him until her death. [8] During the early 1940s, he rented the ground floor of 7 Cromwell Place, South Kensington, John Everett Millais's old studio. Lightfoot helped him install an illicit roulette wheel there, organised by Bacon and his friends. [9] It is believed by art critics that Bacon's interest in a working-class perspective developed due to his relationship with Nanny Lightfoot. [10]

The family moved between Ireland and England several times, leading to a sense of displacement which remained with Bacon throughout his life. They lived in Cannycourt House in County Kildare from 1911, [7] later moving to Westbourne Terrace in London, close to where Bacon's father worked at the Territorial Force Records Office. They returned to Ireland after the First World War. Bacon lived with his maternal grandmother and step-grandfather, Winifred and Kerry Supple, at Farmleigh, Abbeyleix, County Laois, although the rest of the family again moved to Straffan Lodge near Naas, County Kildare.[ citation needed ]

Bacon was a shy child and enjoyed dressing up. This, and his effeminate manner, angered his father. [10] A story emerged in 1992 of his father having had Bacon horsewhipped by their grooms. [11] He was often ill as a child, suffering from asthma and an allergy to horses. [10] His poor health meant his formal education was sporadic; he received lessons at home from a private tutor, and from 1924 to 1926 attended Dean Close, a boarding school in Cheltenham. [12] At a fancy-dress party at the family home, Bacon dressed as a flapper with an Eton crop, beaded dress, lipstick, high heels, and a long cigarette holder. Later that year, Bacon was thrown out of Straffan Lodge following an incident in which his father found him admiring himself in front of a large mirror wearing his mother's underwear. [13]

London, Berlin and Paris

Bacon spent the latter half of 1926 in London, on an allowance of £3 a week from his mother's trust fund, reading Friedrich Nietzsche. He found that by avoiding rent and engaging in petty theft, he could survive. To supplement his income, he briefly tried his hand at domestic service, but although he enjoyed cooking, he became bored and resigned. He was sacked from a telephone-answering position at a shop selling women's clothes in Poland Street in Soho after writing a poison pen letter to the owner.

Bacon found himself drifting through London's homosexual underworld, aware that he was able to attract a certain type of rich man, something he was quick to take advantage of, having developed a taste for good food and wine. One was a relative of Winnie Harcourt-Smith, another breeder of racehorses, who was renowned for his manliness. Bacon claimed his father had asked this "uncle" to take him 'in-hand' and 'make a man of him'. Bacon had a difficult relationship with his father, once admitting to being sexually attracted to him. [14] He moved to Berlin in 1927, where he saw Fritz Lang's Metropolis and Sergei Eisenstein's Battleship Potemkin , both later to be influences on his work. He spent two months in Berlin, though Harcourt-Smith left after one: "He soon got tired of me, of course, and went off with a woman ... I didn't really know what to do, so I hung on for a while."

Bacon, then 17, spent the next year and a half in Paris. He met Yvonne Bocquentin, pianist and connoisseur, [15] at the opening of an exhibition. Aware of his own need to learn French, Bacon lived for three months with Madame Bocquentin and her family at their house near Chantilly, Oise. He travelled into Paris to visit the city's art galleries. [16] At the Château de Chantilly (Musée Condé) he saw Nicolas Poussin's Massacre of the Innocents, a painting which he often referred to in his later work. [17]

Bacon moved back to London in the winter of 1928/29 to work as an interior designer. He took a studio at 17 Queensberry Mews West, South Kensington, sharing the upper floor with Eric Allden – his first collector – and his childhood nanny, Jessie Lightfoot. In 1929, he met Eric Hall, his patron and lover in an often torturous and abusive relationship. Bacon left the Queensberry Mews West studio in 1931 and had no settled space for some years. He probably shared a studio with Roy De Maistre circa 1931/32 in Chelsea. [18]

Furniture and rugs

The 1933 Crucifixion was his first painting to attract public attention, and was in part based on Pablo Picasso's The Three Dancers of 1925. It was not well received; disillusioned, he abandoned painting for nearly a decade and suppressed his earlier works. [19] He visited Paris in 1935 where he bought a secondhand book on anatomical diseases of the mouth containing high-quality hand-coloured plates of both open mouths and oral interiors, [20] which haunted and obsessed him for the remainder of his life. These and the scene with the nurse screaming on the Odessa steps from the Battleship Potemkin later became recurrent parts of Bacon's iconography, with the angularity of Eisenstein's images often combined with the thick red palette of his recently purchased medical tome.

In the winter of 1935–36, Roland Penrose and Herbert Read, making a first selection for the International Surrealist Exhibition, visited his studio at 71 Royal Hospital Road, Chelsea saw "three or four large canvases including one with a grandfather clock", but found his work "insufficiently surreal to be included in the show". Bacon claimed Penrose told him "Mr. Bacon, don't you realise a lot has happened in painting since the Impressionists?" In 1936 or 1937 Bacon moved from 71 Royal Hospital Road to the top floor of 1 Glebe Place, Chelsea, which Eric Hall had rented.. [2]

In January 1937, at Thomas Agnew and Sons, 43 Old Bond Street, London, Bacon exhibited in a group show, Young British Painters, which included Graham Sutherland and Roy De Maistre. Eric Hall organised the show. He showed four works: Figures in a Garden (1936); Abstraction, Abstraction from the Human Form (known from magazine photographs) and Seated Figure (also lost). These paintings prefigure Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion (1944) in alternatively representing a tripod structure (Abstraction), bared teeth (Abstraction from the Human Form), and both being biomorphic in form.

On 1 June 1940, Bacon's father died. Bacon was named sole Trustee/Executor of his father's will, which requested the funeral be as "private and simple as possible". Unfit for active wartime service, Bacon volunteered for civil defence and worked full-time in the Air Raid Precautions (ARP) rescue service; the fine dust of bombed London worsened his asthma and he was discharged. At the height of the Blitz, Eric Hall rented a cottage for Bacon and himself at Bedales Lodge in Steep, near Petersfield, Hampshire. Figure Getting Out of a Car (ca. 1939/1940) was painted here but is known only from an early 1946 photograph taken by Peter Rose Pulham. The photograph was taken shortly before the canvas was painted over by Bacon and retitled Landscape with Car. An ancestor to the biomorphic form of the central panel of Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion (1944), the composition was suggested by a photograph of Hitler getting out of a car at one of the Nuremberg rallies. Bacon claims to have "copied the car and not much else". [21]

Bacon and Hall in 1943 took the ground floor of 7 Cromwell Place, South Kensington, formerly the house and studio of John Everett Millais. High-vaulted and north-lit, its roof was recently bombed – Bacon was able to adapt a large old billiard room at the back as his studio. Lightfoot, lacking an alternative location, slept on the kitchen table. They held illicit roulette parties, organised by Bacon with the assistance of Hall.

Early success

Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, 1944. Oil and pastel on Sundeala board. Tate Britain, London Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion.jpg
Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion , 1944. Oil and pastel on Sundeala board. Tate Britain, London

By 1944 Bacon had gained confidence and moved toward developing his unique signature style. [22] His Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion had summarised themes explored in his earlier paintings, including his examination of Picasso's biomorphs, his interpretations of the Crucifixion, and the Greek Furies. It is generally considered his first mature piece; [23] he regarded his works before the triptych as irrelevant. The painting caused a sensation when exhibited in 1945 and established him as a foremost post-war painter. Remarking on the cultural significance of Three Studies, John Russell observed in 1971 that "there was painting in England before the Three Studies, and painting after them, and no one ... can confuse the two." [24]

Painting (1946) was shown in several group shows including in the British section of Exposition internationale d'art moderne (18 November – 28 December 1946) at the Musée National d'Art Moderne, for which Bacon travelled to Paris. Within a fortnight of the sale of Painting (1946) to the Hanover Gallery Bacon used the proceeds to decamp from London to Monte Carlo. After staying at a succession of hotels and flats, including the Hôtel de Ré, Bacon settled in a large villa, La Frontalière, in the hills above the town. Hall and Lightfoot would come to stay. Bacon spent much of the next few years in Monte Carlo apart from short visits to London. From Monte Carlo, Bacon wrote to Sutherland and Erica Brausen. His letters to Brausen show he painted there, but no paintings are known to survive. Bacon said he became "obsessed" with the Casino de Monte Carlo, where he would "spend whole days". Falling in debt from gambling, he was unable to afford a new canvas. This compelled him to paint on the raw, unprimed side of his previous work, a practice he kept throughout his life. [25]

In 1948, Painting (1946) sold to Alfred Barr for the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York for £240. Bacon wrote to Sutherland asking that he apply fixative to the patches of pastel on Painting (1946) before it was shipped to New York. (The work is now too fragile to be moved from MoMA for exhibition elsewhere.) At least one visit to Paris in 1946 brought Bacon into contact with French postwar painting and Left Bank ideas such as Existentialism. [26] He had, by this time, embarked on his lifelong friendship with Isabel Rawsthorne, a painter closely involved with Giacometti and the Left Bank set. [27] They shared many interests, including ethnography and classical literature. [28]

Late 1940s

In 1947, Sutherland introduced Bacon to Brausen, who represented Bacon for twelve years. Despite this, Bacon did not mount a one-man show in Brausen's Hanover Gallery until 1949. [29] Bacon returned to London and Cromwell Place late in 1948.

The following year Bacon exhibited his "Heads" series, most notable for Head VI , Bacon's first surviving engagement with Velázquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X (three 'popes' were painted in Monte Carlo in 1946 but were destroyed). He kept an extensive inventory of images for source material, but preferred not to confront the major works in person; he viewed Portrait of Innocent X only once, much later in his life. [30]

1950s

Three Studies for a Portrait of Henrietta Moraes, 1963 Three Studies for the Portrait of Henrietta Moraes.jpg
Three Studies for a Portrait of Henrietta Moraes , 1963

Bacon's main haunt was The Colony Room, a private drinking club at 41 Dean Street in Soho, known as "Muriel's" after Muriel Belcher, its proprietor. [31] [32] Belcher had run the Music-box club in Leicester Square during the war, and secured a 3 – 11 pm drinking licence for the Colony Room bar as a private-members club. Bacon was an early member, joining the day after its opening in 1948. [33] He was 'adopted' by Belcher as a 'daughter', and allowed free drinks and £10 a week to bring in friends and rich patrons. In 1948 he met John Minton, a regular at Muriel's, as were the painters Lucian Freud, Frank Auerbach, Patrick Swift and the Vogue photographer John Deakin. [34]

In 1950, Bacon met the art critic David Sylvester, then best known for his writing on Henry Moore and Alberto Giacometti. Sylvester had admired and written about Bacon since 1948. Bacon's artistic inclinations in the 1950s moved towards his abstracted figures which were typically isolated in geometrical cage-like spaces, and set against flat, nondescript backgrounds. Bacon said that he saw images "in series", and his work typically focused more on a single subject for sustained periods, often in triptych or diptych formats. [35] Although his decisions might have been driven by the fact that in the 1950s he tended to produce group works for specific showings, usually leaving things until the last minute, there is a significant development in his aesthetic choices during this period which influenced his preference for the represented content in his paintings.[ citation needed ] On 30 April 1951, Jessie Lightfoot, his childhood nanny, died at Cromwell Place; Bacon was gambling in Nice when he learned of her death. She had been his closest companion, joining him in London on his return from Paris, and lived with him and Eric Alden at Queensberry Mews West, and later with Eric Hall near Petersfield, in Monte Carlo and at Cromwell Place. Stricken, Bacon sold the 7 Cromwell Place apartment.[ citation needed ]

In 1952, Bacon met Peter Lacy a pianist and former RAF pilot from a similar social background to himself. [36] Lacy was a violent alcoholic who was disliked by Bacon's contemporaries but was also described as the love of Bacon's life. The pair engaged in an off and on relationship which had a significant S&M aspect where Bacon would deliberately provoke acts of violence from Lacy. [37] [38] In the mid-1950s Lacy moved to Tangier, Morocco and Bacon also began to spend some of his time there. [39]

In 1958 he aligned with the Marlborough Fine Art gallery, who remained as his sole dealer until 1992. In return for a 10-year contract, Marlborough advanced him money against current and future paintings, with the price of each determined by its size.[ citation needed ] A painting measuring 20 inches by 24 inches was valued at £165 ($462), while one of 65 inches by 78 inches was valued at £420 ($1,176); these were sizes Bacon favoured. According to the contract, the painter would try to supply the gallery with £3,500 ($9,800) worth of pictures each year. [40]

1960s and 1970s

In 1962, Bacon's lover Peter Lacy died from the effects of alcoholism the day before Bacon opened a retrospective exhibition in the Tate. [37] Bacon met George Dyer in 1963 at a pub, [41] although a much-repeated myth claims they met when Dyer burgled Bacon's flat. [42] Dyer was about 30 years old, from London's East End. He came from a family steeped in crime and had till then spent his life drifting between theft and prison. Bacon's earlier relationships had been with older and tumultuous men. His previous lover, Peter Lacy, had a reputation for tearing up Bacon's paintings, beating him in drunken rages, and at times leaving him on streets half-conscious. [43] Bacon was now the dominating personality, attracted to Dyer's vulnerability and trusting nature. Dyer was impressed by Bacon's self-confidence and success, and Bacon acted as a protector and father figure to the insecure younger man. [44]

Dyer was, like Bacon, a borderline alcoholic and similarly took obsessive care with his appearance. Pale-faced and a chain-smoker, Dyer typically confronted his daily hangovers by drinking again. His compact and athletic build belied a docile and inwardly tortured personality, although the art critic Michael Peppiatt describes him as having the air of a man who could "land a decisive punch". Their behaviours eventually overwhelmed their affair, and by 1970 Bacon was merely providing Dyer with enough money to stay more or less permanently drunk. [44]

As Bacon's work moved from the extreme subject matter of his early paintings to portraits of friends in the mid-1960s, Dyer became a dominating presence. [45] Bacon's paintings emphasise Dyer's physicality, yet are uncharacteristically tender. More than any other of Bacon's close friends, Dyer came to feel inseparable from his portraits. The paintings gave him stature, a raison d'etre, and offered meaning to what Bacon described as Dyer's "brief interlude between life and death". [46] Many critics have described Dyer's portraits as favourites, including Michel Leiris and Lawrence Gowing. Yet as Dyer's novelty diminished within Bacon's circle of sophisticated intellectuals, Dyer became increasingly bitter and ill at ease. Although Dyer welcomed the attention the paintings brought him, he did not pretend to understand or even like them. "All that money an' I fink they're reely 'orrible," he observed with choked pride. [47]

Dyer abandoned crime but descended into alcoholism. Bacon's money attracted hangers-on for benders around London's Soho. Withdrawn and reserved when sober, Dyer was highly animated and aggressive when drunk, and often attempted to "pull a Bacon" by buying large rounds and paying for expensive dinners for his wide circle. Dyer's erratic behaviour inevitably wore thin with his cronies, with Bacon, and with Bacon's friends. Most of Bacon's art world associates regarded Dyer as a nuisance – an intrusion into the world of high culture to which their Bacon belonged. [48] Dyer reacted by becoming increasingly needy and dependent. By 1971, he was drinking alone and only in occasional contact with his former lover. [44]

In October 1971, Dyer joined Bacon in Paris for the opening of Bacon's retrospective at the Grand Palais . While Bacon's career was at a peak, he was described at the time as Britain's "greatest living painter", Dyer knew that his own importance to Bacon was in decline. To gain attention, he planted cannabis in his flat and phoned the police, and attempted suicide on a number of occasions. [49] [50] In Paris, Bacon and Dyer initially shared a hotel room, but Bacon left. When he returned on the morning of 24 October, with Danziger-Miles and Valerie Beston, they discovered Dyer's body. They persuaded the hotel manager not to announce the death for two days. [51]

Bacon spent the following day surrounded by people eager to meet him. In mid-evening of the following day, he was "informed" that Dyer had taken an overdose of barbiturates and was dead. Bacon continued with the retrospective and displayed powers of self-control "to which few of us could aspire", according to Russell. [52] Bacon was deeply affected by the loss of Dyer and had recently lost four other friends and his nanny. From this point, death haunted his life and work. [53] Though outwardly stoic at the time, he was inwardly broken. He did not express his feelings to critics but later admitted to friends that "daemons, disaster and loss" now stalked him as if his own version of the Eumenides (Greek for The Furies). [54] Bacon spent the remainder of his stay in Paris attending to promotional activities and funeral arrangements. He returned to London later that week to comfort Dyer's family. [55]

During the funeral, many of Dyer's friends, including hardened East-End criminals, broke down in tears. As the coffin was lowered into the grave one friend was overcome and screamed "you bloody fool!" Bacon remained stoic during the proceedings, but in the following months suffered an emotional and physical breakdown. Deeply affected, over the following two years he painted a number of single canvas portraits of Dyer, and the three highly regarded "Black Triptychs", each of which details moments immediately before and after Dyer's suicide. [56]

Death

While on holiday, Bacon was admitted to the private Clinica Ruber, Madrid in 1992. [57] His chronic asthma, which had plagued him all his life, had developed into a more severe respiratory condition and he could not talk or breathe very well.

He died of a heart attack on 28 April 1992, aged 82. He bequeathed his estate (then valued at £11 million) to his heir and sole legatee John Edwards; in 1998, at Edwards' request, Brian Clarke, a friend of Bacon and Edwards, was installed as sole executor of the estate by the High Court, following the Court's severing of all ties between Bacon's former gallery, Marlborough Fine Art, and his estate. [58] In 1998 the director of the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin secured Edwards' and Clarke's donation of the contents of Bacon's studio at 7 Reece Mews, South Kensington. [59] The contents of his studio were surveyed, moved, and reconstructed in the gallery. [60]

Themes

The Crucifixion

The imagery of the crucifixion weighs heavily in the work of Francis Bacon. [61] Critic John Russell wrote that the crucifixion in Bacon's work is a "generic name for an environment in which bodily harm is done to one or more persons and one or more other persons gather to watch". [62] Bacon admitted that he saw the scene as "a magnificent armature on which you can hang all types of feeling and sensation". [63] He believed the imagery of the crucifixion allowed him to examine "certain areas of human behaviour" in a unique way, as the armature of the theme had been accumulated by so many old masters. [63]

Though he came to painting relatively late in life – he did not begin to paint seriously until his late 30s – crucifixion scenes can be found in his earliest works. [64] In 1933, his patron Eric Hall commissioned a series of three paintings based on the subject. [65] The early paintings were influenced by such old masters as Matthias Grünewald, Diego Velázquez and Rembrandt, [64] but also by Picasso's late 1920s/early 1930s biomorphs and the early work of the Surrealists. [66]

Popes

Bacon's series of Popes, largely quoting Velázquez's famous Portrait of Innocent X (1650, Galeria Doria Pamphili, Rome), are striking images which further develop motifs already found in his earlier works, like the Study for Three Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, such as the screaming open mouth. The figures of the popes, pictorially isolated by partly curved parallel lines indicating psychological forces and symbolising inner energy like the strength of feeling, are alienated from their original representation and, stripped of their representation of power to allegories of suffering humanity. [67]

Reclining figures

Many of Bacon's paintings are "inhabited" by reclining figures. Single, or, as in triptychs, repeated with variations, they can be commented by symbolic indexes (like circular arrows as signs for rotation), turning painted images into blueprints for moving images of the type of contemporary GIFs. The composition of especially the nude figures is influenced by the sculptural work of Michelangelo. The multi-phasing of his rendition of the figures, which often is also applied to the sitters in the portraits, is also a reference to Eadweard Muybridge's chronophotography. [67]

The screaming mouth

Still from Sergei Eisenstein's 1925 silent film Battleship Potemkin Eisenstein Potemkin 2.jpg
Still from Sergei Eisenstein's 1925 silent film Battleship Potemkin

The inspiration for the recurring motif of screaming mouths in many Bacons of the late 1940s and early 1950s was drawn from a number of sources, including medical textbooks. Kathleen Clark's 1939 book of X-Ray photographs was a major source. [68] He also used the works of Matthias Grünewald [69] and photographic stills of the nurse in the Odessa Steps scene in Eisenstein's 1925 silent film Battleship Potemkin . Bacon saw the film in 1935 and viewed it frequently thereafter. He kept in his studio a photographic still of the scene, showing a close-up of the nurse's head screaming in panic and terror and with broken pince-nez spectacles hanging from her blood-stained face. He referred to the image throughout his career, using it as a source of inspiration. [70]

Bacon described the screaming mouth as a catalyst for his work and incorporated its shape when painting the chimera. His use of the motif can be seen in one of his first surviving works, [71] Abstraction from the Human Form. By the early 1950s it became an obsessive concern, to the point, according to art critic and Bacon biographer Michael Peppiatt, "it would be no exaggeration to say that, if one could really explain the origins and implications of this scream, one would be far closer to understanding the whole art of Francis Bacon." [72]

Legacy

Auction value

The Popes and large triptychs, in their time, commanded the highest prices at auction. [73] By 1989 Bacon was the most expensive living artist after one of his triptychs sold at Sotheby's for over US$6 million. In 2007, actress Sophia Loren consigned Study for Portrait II (1956) from the estate of her late husband Carlo Ponti at Christie's. [74] It was auctioned for the then record price of £14.2 million ($27.5 million). [75]

In 2008, the Triptych, 1976 sold at Sotheby's for €55.465 million ($86.28 million), then a record for a work by Bacon and the highest price paid for a postwar work of art at auction at the time. In 2013, Three Studies of Lucian Freud sold at Christie's New York for $142.4 million, surpassing both Triptych and 1976 in auctioned value, the record for the highest auction price of a work of art at that time, surpassing the fourth version of Edvard Munch's Scream. Leonardo da Vinci's Salvator Mundi later sold for a higher price. [76]

Estate assignment

In 1999, England's High Court ruled that Marlborough Fine Art, Bacon's former gallery, had to be replaced by a new, independent representative for the administration of the estate. The estate then engaged as representation the Tony Shafrazi Gallery in New York and Faggionato Fine Arts in Europe. [73] That same year, the estate sued Marlborough UK and Marlborough International, Vaduz, charging them with wrongfully exploiting Bacon in a relationship that was manifestly disadvantageous to him until his death in 1992, and to his estate. [77] The suit alleged Marlborough in London grossly underpaid Bacon for his works and resold them through its Liechtenstein branch at much higher prices, contending that Marlborough never supplied a complete accounting of Bacon's works, and failed to account for up to 33 of his paintings. [78] [79] The litigation was settled out of court in early 2002, following Edwards' diagnosis of lung cancer, with both sides paying their own costs. [80] During the legal process, an undisclosed number of Bacon's paintings were recovered from Marlborough, and "vast quantities of correspondence and documents relating to Bacon's life were handed over by the gallery". [81] In 2003, the estate was handed to a four-person trust based in Jersey. [82]

Studio relocation

The site of Bacon's relocated studio, Dublin Ricostruzione delle studio di francis bacon di 7 reece mews, londra, usato dal 1961 al 1992, 01.jpg
The site of Bacon's relocated studio, Dublin

In August 1998, Bacon's sole heir John Edwards and the artist Brian Clarke, sole executor of Bacon's estate, donated the contents of Bacon's studio to the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin. [83] [84] The studio at 7 Reece Mews had remained largely untouched since Bacon's death in 1992. A team of archaeologists, art historians, conservators and curators oversaw the relocation to Dublin. [85] The locations of over 7,000 items were mapped, survey and elevation drawings made, the items packed and catalogued, and the studio was rebuilt, including the original doors, floor, walls and ceiling. [84]

In 2001 the relocated studio was opened to the public, with a fully comprehensive database. [86] Every item in the studio has a database entry. Each entry consists of an image and a factual account of an object. The database has entries on approximately 570 books and catalogues, 1,500 photographs, 100 slashed canvases, 1,300 leaves torn from books, 2,000 artist's materials and 70 drawings. Other categories include Bacon's correspondence, magazines, newspapers and vinyl records. [84]

Catalogue raisonné

The first, but even then incomplete catalogue raisonné was compiled in 1964 by the Tate gallery curator Ronald Alley, . [87] [88] In 2016, a five-volume Francis Bacon: Catalogue Raisonné, documenting 584 paintings, was compiled and published by Martin Harrison and others. [87]

See also

Notes and references

  1. Harrison, Martin. "Out of the Black Cavern". Christie's. Retrieved 4 November 2018 Archived on 11 November 2019.
  2. 1 2 Schmied (1996), 121.
  3. Some had appeared in black-and-white photographs in the late 1950s Catalogue Raisonné.
  4. Tate. "Francis Bacon (1909–1992) – Tate". Archived from the original on 16 February 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  5. "The Estate of Francis Bacon | Bacon's World". 31 January 2008. Archived from the original on 31 January 2008. Retrieved 9 November 2020.
  6. Peppiatt (1996), 4.
  7. 1 2 "Bacon family's 1911 census form details". Census.nationalarchives.ie. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  8. Hopkin, Alannah. "https://www.irishexaminer.com/lifestyle/artsandculture/arid-41418079.html Book review: Portrait of Bacon in a different light]". Irish Examiner, 22 June 2024. Retrieved 1 December 2024
  9. Higgins, Charlotte (22 November 2009). "Sado-masochism and stolen shoe polish: Bacon's legacy revisited". The Guardian . Retrieved 25 June 2022.
  10. 1 2 3 Mark Stevens; Annalyn Swan; Robert Storr. "Francis Bacon: Revelations". HENI Talks.
  11. "I was told by a homosexual friend of Francis' that he'd once admitted that his father, the dreaded and failed horse trainer, had arranged that his small son spend his childhood being systematically and viciously horsewhipped by his Irish grooms.", Caroline Blackwood, "Francis Bacon (1909–1992)", The New York Review of Books , Volume 39, No. 15, 24 September 1992.
  12. Cappock, Margarita (September 2010). "Bacon, Francis". Dictionary of Irish Biography . doi:10.3318/dib.000297.v2. Archived from the original on 2 June 2024.
  13. Peppiatt, Michael (2015). "Conversations at Night". Francis Bacon in Your Blood: A Memoir. United Kingdom: Bloomsbury. ISBN   978-1-4088-5624-6.
  14. Noor, Tausif (9 June 2021). "Behind the Hedonist Persona of Francis Bacon. Annalyn Swan and Mark Stevens's comprehensive study of the British artist is a sensitive investigation into his artistic identity". The Nation (book review).
  15. Russell, John (27 July 1997). "A Magnificent Mischief-Maker". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 February 2024.
  16. Peppiatt (1996), 32.
  17. "Francis Bacon: Art Books, Dublin City Gallery". 21 July 2014. Archived from the original on 21 July 2014.
  18. "Roy De Maistre 1894 - 1968". Estate of Francis Bacon. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  19. Peppiatt, Michael. Francis Bacon: Anatomy of an Enigma. New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1996.
  20. Grünwald, Ludwig; Grayson, Charles Prevost (8 November 1902). "Atlas and abstract of the diseases of the larynx". Philadelphia : W.B Saunders via Internet Archive.
  21. "Landscape with Car Archived 3 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine ". Christies, 2007. Retrieved June 2017.
  22. Haden-Guest, A. (1998). True Colors: The Real Life of the Art World. United Kingdom: Atlantic Monthly Press. p. 278. ISBN   9780871137258.
  23. Bragg, Melvyn. "Francis Bacon". South Bank Show. BBC documentary film, first aired 9 June 1985.
  24. Russell (1971), 22.
  25. Wrathall, Claire (6 July 2016). "Francis Bacon's Monaco magic is highlighted in a new exhibition". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 23 October 2016. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  26. Letter by Bacon to G. Sutherland, 30 December 1946, Monte Carlo, National Galleries and Museums of Wales.
  27. Jacobi, Carol (2021). Out of the Cage: The Art of Isabel Rawsthorne. Thames and Hudson. ISBN   978-0500971055.
  28. Jacobi, Carol (2009). "Cat's Cradle – Francis Bacon and the Art of 'Isabel Rawsthorne'". Visual Culture in Britain. 10 (3): 293–314. doi:10.1080/14714780903265945. S2CID   191479882.
  29. Francis Bacon Archived 27 January 2013 at archive.today L&M Arts, New York / Los Angeles.
  30. Peppiatt, 148.
  31. "Muriel Belcher; Francis Bacon". National Portrait Gallery, London. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  32. "From Francis Bacon to Tracey Emin: Soho's historic Colony Room Club – in pictures". The Guardian, 13 September 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  33. "Gallery Talk: Francis Bacon, Portrait of Henrietta Moraes". Christie's. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  34. Coffield, Darren; Koons, Emin (9 May 2018), "Drink-Up Pay-Up F-Off: Tales from the Colony – London's Lost Bohemia". Artlyst. Retrieved 30 January 2022.
  35. Peppiatt (1996), p. 87
  36. Alberge, Dalya (8 January 2021). "'They adored each other': book casts new light on Francis Bacon's lover". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 15 November 2024.
  37. 1 2 Acocella, Joan (17 May 2021). "Francis Bacon's Frightening Beauty". The New Yorker. ISSN   0028-792X . Retrieved 15 November 2024.
  38. Jones, Jonathan (8 October 2024). "Francis Bacon: Human Presence review – 'This whirligig of horrors is the best Bacon show I've ever seen'". The Guardian. ISSN   0261-3077 . Retrieved 15 November 2024.
  39. "Obsessive Love: Francis Bacon and Peter Lacy | Barnebys Magazine". Barnebys.com. 3 March 2020. Retrieved 15 November 2024.
  40. Shnayerson, Michael (August 2000), "Francis Bacon's Tangled Web", Vanity Fair Archived 13 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine .
  41. "Consumed by his own Effigy: George Dyer's Relationship with Francis Bacon on Sotheby's Blog". Sotheby's. 9 June 2014. Archived from the original on 1 March 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  42. Akbar, Arifa. "Inside the Mind of Francis Bacon" [ dead link ]. The Independent (London), 25 April 2007. Retrieved 29 July 2007.
  43. Heaney, Joe. "Love is the Devil". Gay Times , September 2006.
  44. 1 2 3 Peppiatt (1996), 211.
  45. Harrison, Martin. "Francis Bacon: lost and found". Apollo Magazine, 1 March 2005.
  46. Peppiatt (1996), 213.
  47. Peppiatt (1996), 214.
  48. Peppiatt (1996), 215.
  49. Norton, James (13 March 2005). "The six loves of Francis Bacon". Sunday Herald.
  50. "George Dyer" Archived 5 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, 2001. Retrieved 29 July 2007.
  51. "Francis Bacon: A Brush with Violence". bbc.co.uk. 28 January 2017. Archived from the original on 29 January 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  52. Russell (1970), 151.
  53. Russell (1971), 178.
  54. Russell (1970), 179.
  55. Russell (1971), p. 151
  56. Peppiatt (1996), 243.
  57. Peppiatt, Michael; Priseman, Robert (2009). The Francis Bacon Interiors: Michael Peppiatt in Conversation with Robert Priseman (PDF). Seabrook Press. p. 23. ISBN   978-0-9562082-2-4.
  58. Delarge, Jean-Pierre. "Bacon, Francis" [The Dictionary of Modern and Contemporary Plastic Arts]. Dictionnaire des arts plastiques modernes et contemporains (in French). Delarge. Archived from the original on 26 January 2021. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  59. Ficacci, 94.
  60. "Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane, Francis Bacon Studio, History of Studio Relocation". Hughlane.ie. Archived from the original on 5 August 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2011.
  61. For his relation to Deleuze, the body and religion, see Sanzaro, Francis (2009). "A Review of Francis Bacon: A Centenary Retrospective at the Metropolitan Museum of Art". Comparative and Continental Philosophy. 1 (2): 279–285. doi:10.1558/ccp.v1i2.279. S2CID   170280225.
  62. Russell, 113.
  63. 1 2 Schmied, 78.
  64. 1 2 Sylvester, 13.
  65. Davies & Yard, 12.
  66. Bürger, Peter. In Zweite (2006), 30.
  67. 1 2 Rump, 146–168.
  68. "Radiology and radiography in the 1960s - British Institute of Radiology". www.bir.org.uk. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  69. Schmied, 73.
  70. Davies.
  71. Throughout his career, Bacon destroyed a great many of his paintings.
  72. Peppiatt, 24.
  73. 1 2 Thornton, Sarah (29 August 2008), "Francis Bacon claims his place at the top of the market", The Art Newspaper . Archived 5 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine .
  74. Gleadell, Colin. (30 January 2007), "Art sales: Sophia Loren's slice of Bacon" Archived 22 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine , The Daily Telegraph.
  75. [s.n.] (9 February 2007). Bacon portrait breaks sale record Archived 4 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine . BBC. Retrieved September 2013.
  76. "Leonardo's Salvator Mundi makes auction history" Archived 6 November 2018 at the Wayback Machine , Christie's, 15 November 2017. Retrieved November 2018.
  77. Boggan, Steve (31 October 2001). "Bacon 'blackmailed' by art gallery owner, court told in dispute over £100m fees". The Independent. Independent UK; The Estate of Francis Bacon. Archived from the original on 21 October 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  78. Boggan, Steve (28 November 2001). "I wooed Bacon with Claridge's champagne but London gallery cheated me, says dealer". The Independent. Independent UK. Archived from the original on 22 October 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  79. Judith H. Dobrzynski (20 April 2000), Dadaist's Heirs Also Fight Marlborough Over Estate Archived 4 November 2016 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times.
  80. Alan Riding (7 March 2003), John Edwards, 53, Francis Bacon Confidant Archived 16 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times .
  81. Boggan, Steve (2 February 2002). "Battle called off between Bacon estate and gallery". The Independent. Independent UK. Archived from the original on 22 October 2019. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
  82. Samuel, Henry (21 April 2010), "Francis Bacon heirs battle Van Gogh foundation", The Daily Telegraph . Archived 6 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine .
  83. Clarke, Brian. "Detritus". Francis Bacon. The Estate of Francis Bacon. Archived from the original on 14 November 2019. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  84. 1 2 3 "Francis Bacon Studio: History of Studio Relocation". The Hugh Lane. Dublin City Council. Archived from the original on 1 December 2019. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  85. "Removal of 7 Reece Mews". Francis Bacon. The Estate of Francis Bacon. Archived from the original on 21 November 2019. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  86. "Francis Bacon Studio". Artist's Studio Museum Network. Watts Gallery. Archived from the original on 12 August 2019. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  87. 1 2 Adams, Alexander (21 July 2016), "All together now: on the Francis Bacon catalogue raisonné", The Art Newspaper .Archived 29 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine .
  88. Morphet, Richard. "[https://www.theguardian.com/news/1999/may/17/guardianobituaries2 Obituary: Ronald Alley]. The Guardian, 17 May 1999. Retrieved 18 January 2025.

Sources and further reading

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Influences on Francis Bacon</span>

The painter Francis Bacon was largely self-taught as an artist. As well as other visual artists, Bacon drew inspiration from the poems of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound and Yeats, the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Shakespeare; Proust and Joyce's Ulysses.

<i>Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion</i> Triptych by Francis Bacon

Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion is a 1944 triptych painted by the Irish-born British artist Francis Bacon. The canvasses are based on the Eumenides—or Furies—of Aeschylus's Oresteia, and depict three writhing anthropomorphic creatures set against a flat burnt orange background. It was executed in oil paint and pastel on Sundeala fibre board and completed within two weeks. The triptych summarises themes explored in Bacon's previous work, including his examination of Picasso's biomorphs and his interpretations of the Crucifixion and the Greek Furies. Bacon did not realise his original intention to paint a large crucifixion scene and place the figures at the foot of the cross.

<i>Triptych, May–June 1973</i> 1973 painting by Francis Bacon

Triptych, May–June 1973 is a triptych completed in 1973 by the Irish-born artist Francis Bacon (1909–1992). The oil-on-canvas was painted in memory of Bacon's lover George Dyer, who committed suicide on the eve of the artist's retrospective at Paris's Grand Palais on 24 October 1971. The triptych is a portrait of the moments before Dyer's death from an overdose of pills in their hotel room. Bacon was haunted and preoccupied by Dyer's loss for the remaining years of his life and painted many works based on both the actual suicide and the events of its aftermath. He admitted to friends that he never fully recovered, describing the 1973 triptych as an exorcism of his feelings of loss and guilt.

<i>Study after Velázquezs Portrait of Pope Innocent X</i> 1953 painting by Francis Bacon

Study after Velázquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X is a 1953 painting by the artist Francis Bacon. The work shows a distorted version of the Portrait of Innocent X painted by Spanish artist Diego Velázquez in 1650. The work is one of the first in a series of around 50 variants of the Velázquez painting which Bacon executed throughout the 1950s and early 1960s. The paintings are widely regarded as highly successful modern re-interpretations of a classic of the Western canon of visual art.

<i>Fragment of a Crucifixion</i> 1950 painting by Francis Bacon

Fragment of a Crucifixion is an unfinished 1950 painting by the Irish-born figurative painter Francis Bacon. It shows two animals engaged in an existential struggle; the upper figure, which may be a dog or a cat, crouches over a chimera and is at the point of kill. It stoops on the horizontal beam of a T-shaped structure, which may signify Christ's cross. The painting contains thinly sketched passer-by figures, who appear as if oblivious to the central drama.

<i>Study for a Self-Portrait—Triptych, 1985–86</i> Painting by Francis Bacon

Study for a Self-Portrait—Triptych, 1985–86 is a triptych painted between 1985 and 1986 by the Irish-born English artist Francis Bacon. It is a brutally honest examination of the effect of age and time on the human body and spirit and was painted in the aftermath of the deaths of many of his close friends. It is Bacon's only full-length self-portrait, and was described by art critic David Sylvester as "grand, stark, ascetic".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Triptychs by Francis Bacon</span> Series of paintings made between 1944 and 1986

The Irish-born artist Francis Bacon (1909–1992) painted 28 known triptychs between 1944 and 1986. He began to work in the format in the mid-1940s with a number of smaller formats before graduating in 1962 to large examples. He followed the larger style for 30 years, although he painted a number of smaller triptychs of friend's heads, and after the death of his former lover George Dyer in 1971, the three Black Triptychs.

<i>The Black Triptychs</i> Sets of paintings by Francis Bacon (1909–1992)

The Black Triptychs are a series of three triptychs painted by the British artist Francis Bacon between 1972 and 1974. Bacon admitted that they were created as an exorcism of his sense of loss following the suicide of his former lover and principal model, George Dyer. On the evening of 24 October 1971, two days before the opening of Bacon's career-making retrospective at the Grand Palais, Dyer, then 37, alcoholic, deeply insecure and suffering severe and long-term depression, committed suicide through an overdose of drink and barbiturates in a room at the Paris hotel Bacon had allowed him to share during a brief period of reconciliation following years of bitter recrimination.

<i>Head VI</i> Painting by Francis Bacon

Head VI is an oil-on-canvas painting by Irish-born figurative artist Francis Bacon, the last of six panels making up his "1949 Head" series. It shows a bust view of a single figure, modeled on Diego Velázquez's Portrait of Innocent X. Bacon applies forceful, expressive brush strokes, and places the figure within a glass cage structure, behind curtain-like drapery. This gives the effect of a man trapped and suffocated by his surroundings, screaming into an airless void. But with an inverted pathos is derived from the ambiguity of the pope's horrifying expression—whose distorted face either screams of untethered hatred towards the viewer or pleads for help from the glass cage—the question of what he is screaming about is left to the audience.

<i>Portrait of Isabel Rawsthorne Standing in a Street in Soho</i> 1967 painting by Francis Bacon

Portrait of Isabel Rawsthorne Standing in a Street in Soho is a 1967 oil-on-canvas painting by the Irish-born English figurative artist Francis Bacon, housed in the Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin. Described by art critic John Russell as one of Bacon's finest works, it depicts Isabel Rawsthorne, the painter, designer and occasional model for artists such as André Derain, Alberto Giacometti and Picasso.

<i>Triptych–August 1972</i> Triptych by Francis Bacon

Triptych–August 1972 is a large oil-on-canvas triptych by the British artist Francis Bacon (1909–1992). It was painted in memory of Bacon's lover George Dyer who committed suicide on 24 October 1971, the eve of the artist's retrospective at Paris's Grand Palais, then the highest honour Bacon had received.

<i>Portrait of George Dyer and Lucian Freud</i> 1967 painting by Francis Bacon

Portrait of George Dyer and Lucian Freud was a 1967 oil-on-canvas painting by the Irish-born artist Francis Bacon, which he destroyed before it left his studio, though it was photographed and is highly regarded by art critics. Bacon was a ruthless self critic, and often abandoned paintings mid-work, or slashed finished canvases; something he often later regretted.

<i>Three Studies for a Crucifixion</i> Painting by Francis Bacon

Three Studies for a Crucifixion is a 1962 triptych oil painting by Francis Bacon. It was completed in March 1962 and comprises three separate canvases, each measuring 198.1 by 144.8 centimetres. The work is held by the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.

<i>Head III</i> 1949 painting by Francis Bacon

Head III is an oil painting by Francis Bacon, one of series of works made in 1949 for his first one-man exhibition at the Hanover Gallery, in London. As with the other six paintings in the series, it focuses on the disembodied head of male figure, who looks out with a penetrating gaze, but is fixed against an isolating, flat, nondescript background, while also enfolded by hazy horizontal foreground curtain-like folds which seems to function like a surrounding cage.

<i>Head V</i> 1949 painting by Francis Bacon

Head V is a 1949 painting by Irish-born British artist Francis Bacon, one of the series of works made in 1949 for his first one-man exhibition at the Hanover Gallery, in London. It measures 82 by 66 centimetres and is held in a private collection. The painting is part of a series of six works from the late 1940s depicting heads. Like Head II, the work depicts a distorted head in a space in a space shrouded with vertical bands interpreted as curtains, with several safety pins in the curtains.

<i>Version No. 2 of Lying Figure with Hypodermic Syringe</i> 1968 painting by Francis Bacon

Version No. 2 of Lying Figure with Hypodermic Syringe is a 1968 oil-on-canvas painting by the English artist Francis Bacon.

<i>Three Studies for Self-Portrait</i> (1979) Painting by Francis Bacon

Three Studies for a Self-Portrait is an oil-on-canvas triptych painting by the Irish-born English artist Francis Bacon. Two of paintings are signed and dated 1979, and the third signed and dated 1979–1980. The work can be viewed as a penetrating self-examinations undertaken in the aftermath of the suicide of his lover George Dyer, and as one of a series of inward looking self-portraits completed during the 1970s. Bacon was seventy at the time, but appears as ageless.

<i>Study for Portrait II (After the Life Mask of William Blake)</i> Painting by Francis Bacon

Study for Portrait II is a small 1955 oil-on-canvas painting by the Irish-born British figurative artist Francis Bacon, one of a series of six portraits completed after viewing that year the English poet, painter and printmaker William Blake's life mask at the National Portrait Gallery in London.