FRANCIS
BACON
A Terrible Beauty
Softbound,
6" x 9", 224
pages
Numerous illustrations
2010, Steidl
Foreword by Barbara Dawson
From the Piblisher:
No artist’s studio rivals Francis
Bacon’s in terms of sheer iconic pungency. The artist’s
furious hurricanes of creativity were writ large upon its walls,
scattered across its floors in a sea of paint pots, brushes, discarded
canvases and much-abused source and reference materials, all of
which seemed to bespeak Bacon’s chaotically rigorous processes:
bodybuilding snaps, reproductions of Muybridge time-lapse sequences,
photo-booth self-portraits,magazine cuttings, tattered monographs,
medical textbooks with images of unusual and often horrific wounds
and diseases, and countless photos of friends such as Lucian Freud,
John Deakin, Isabel Rawsthorne,Muriel Belcher and George Dyer,
from which the artist built his portraits of them. Bacon’s
exceptional eloquence on the subject of his painting process,
taken in combination with the iconicity and visual impact of his
studio (now preserved at the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery at the
Dublin City Gallery), enables his admirers to envisage something
of how his paintings were made. In celebration of the centenary
of Bacon’s birth, and chiming with an exhibition at the
Dublin City Gallery, A Terrible Beauty excavates Bacon’s
studio to reveal the methods,materials and processes through which
Bacon arrived at his paintings. Drawing on the Hugh Lane’s
vast archive of materials, it gathers new scholarship and insights
from Rebecca Daniels, Barbara Dawson,Marcel Fincke,Martin Harrison,
Jessica O’Donnell, Joanna Shepard and Logan Sisley, and
is a major publication for Bacon fans and scholars alike.
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