{"title":"Francis Bacon (1909-1992)","authors":"Eleonora Jedlińska","doi":"10.38003/zrffs.14.11","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Francis Bacon painted pictures based mostly on photographs published in encyclopaedias, popular magazines, the tabloid press, posters and packaging. He was interested in reproductions of paintings by great masters. He used photographs by Muybridge. Photographs, treated by Bacon as tools, were later “worked on” by the artist, becoming the canvas for his paintings. The scenes he chose – often drastic, depicting rape and violence – were painted into his canvases, creating a deformed image of the world that “emerged” from the horrors of both world wars. He painted portraits based on his photographs of friends. These were usually people with whom the artist was emotionally connected. He painted self-portraits base on a series of photographs taken in automatic photography, from which he selected several to form the basis of his paintings. Real things and persons should exist in the fictional space assigned to them. By destroying literalism in painting, Bacon wanted to find the similarity desired in painting as its principal, so to rediscover realism. When painting a portrait, he tried to capture the appearance of the figure. After Francis Bacon’s death, his London studio (7, Reece Mews), restored by conservators, was “repeated” in the space of the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin. It contains about 7,500 objects, among them numerous photographs which had been torn up by the artist, photographs of his lovers and friends, black and white reproductions. The Bacon ‘archive’ collected in Dublin is now a silent hint of the creative process of the artist, who despite numerous studies devoted to him and recorded conversations, still remains one of the most inscrutable artists of the 20th century.","PeriodicalId":34331,"journal":{"name":"Zbornik radova Filozofskog fakulteta u Splitu","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-12-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Zbornik radova Filozofskog fakulteta u Splitu","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.38003/zrffs.14.11","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Francis Bacon painted pictures based mostly on photographs published in encyclopaedias, popular magazines, the tabloid press, posters and packaging. He was interested in reproductions of paintings by great masters. He used photographs by Muybridge. Photographs, treated by Bacon as tools, were later “worked on” by the artist, becoming the canvas for his paintings. The scenes he chose – often drastic, depicting rape and violence – were painted into his canvases, creating a deformed image of the world that “emerged” from the horrors of both world wars. He painted portraits based on his photographs of friends. These were usually people with whom the artist was emotionally connected. He painted self-portraits base on a series of photographs taken in automatic photography, from which he selected several to form the basis of his paintings. Real things and persons should exist in the fictional space assigned to them. By destroying literalism in painting, Bacon wanted to find the similarity desired in painting as its principal, so to rediscover realism. When painting a portrait, he tried to capture the appearance of the figure. After Francis Bacon’s death, his London studio (7, Reece Mews), restored by conservators, was “repeated” in the space of the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin. It contains about 7,500 objects, among them numerous photographs which had been torn up by the artist, photographs of his lovers and friends, black and white reproductions. The Bacon ‘archive’ collected in Dublin is now a silent hint of the creative process of the artist, who despite numerous studies devoted to him and recorded conversations, still remains one of the most inscrutable artists of the 20th century.
弗朗西斯·培根主要根据百科全书、流行杂志、小报、海报和包装上发表的照片作画。他对大师画作的复制品很感兴趣。他用了穆布里奇的照片。照片被培根视为工具,后来被这位艺术家“加工”,成为他绘画的画布。他选择的场景——通常是激烈的,描绘强奸和暴力——被绘制在他的画布上,创造了一个从两次世界大战的恐怖中“浮现”出来的变形世界形象。他根据朋友的照片画肖像。这些人通常与艺术家有情感联系。他根据自动摄影中拍摄的一系列照片绘制自画像,并从中挑选了几张作为绘画的基础。真实的事物和人应该存在于分配给他们的虚构空间中。培根通过破坏绘画中的文学性,试图找到绘画中所期望的相似性作为其主体,从而重新发现现实主义。在画肖像时,他试图捕捉人物的外表。弗朗西斯·培根去世后,他的伦敦工作室(7,Reece Mews)在都柏林的休·莱恩画廊(Hugh Lane Gallery)的空间里被“重复”。它包含了大约7500件物品,其中包括艺术家撕毁的许多照片、他的爱人和朋友的照片、黑白复制品。在都柏林收集的培根“档案”现在无声地暗示了这位艺术家的创作过程,尽管对他进行了大量研究并记录了对话,但他仍然是20世纪最神秘的艺术家之一。