Bacon and the Masters, Norwich (UEA)
Afraid this exhibition is now finished – I got to see it in its last week – so its a bit redundant now to review it. However, I’m rather redundant myself, so here’s a few words. First, I have to take issue with Jonathan Jones’ assessment in the Guardian; he thought the “Masters” (Matisse, Rembrandt, Velasquez, Van Gogh, Bernini et al), whose works Bacon used as templates or providers of inspiration, actually made Bacon’s efforts look rather “silly”. His previous admiration for the British painter evaporated in the presence of the Masters.
There is no doubt that the Rembrandts are striking and the terracotta Bernini torsos staggeringly powerful, even though small; my feeling is, however, that Bacon’s work stands up well and does justice to those whose works he used – or rather, the photographs of them, since he famously avoided seeing the originals.
Take the paintings below, for instance; the powerful, sinister “Figures in a Landscape” (1956):
or the portrait (1957) of Peter Lacey, Bacon’s sadistic “true love”, who did the painter quite serious injury in lovemaking (I don’t know if Bacon returned the compliment – I suspect not); I think the portrait suggests one of the Furies about to descend…
or this great sketch or half-started work on linen from 1981, one of the three large sketches that begin the exhibition:
Here’s one of the Berninis for comparison:
The only Bacon that I felt was not up to par was a sketch of the Screaming Pope. it suggested a Steve Bell to me…
Look closely at any Bacon and you will see how thinly and carefully he paints, with a stroke that is often very dry. The portraits are painstaking and the famous distortion does not obscure the likeness in most cases; it’s dissection and reassembly, not butchery, not by a long way.
Afterwards, using one of the luxurious WCs in the Sainsbury building, I saw myself in the mirror which takes up the whole rear wall. Slightly crouched, toilet paper in hand, trousers around lower legs, furtive expression… a rather typical Bacon scenario, to match those in the gallery…
Watching an Arena DVD on Bacon, I was struck again by his odd pronunciation of Rembrandt – it was “Rembr’ndt”. A while later he did it again with “chimp’nzee”. I thought it was unique – then I watched a DVD on Auerbach and he said “Rembr’ndt” too.
John Golding, UEA
Up the stairs from the Bacon exhibition was this large show of paintings from Golding, a major British abstract artist, somewhat akin to Hoyland, I think, as a sort of counterweight to the great figurative master on the ground floor. Here are three works, all large, from different periods. This show may still be on – worth a trip to Norwich, if it is.
The Double Life of Veronique, Kieslowski
This film was on TV last week. I can’t make my mind up about Kieslowski’s work – sometimes, as here, it strikes me as sentimental and soft focus, a little bit “Truly, Madly, Deeply”; she falls in love with a handsome puppeteer, for god’s sake. Then again, he did “A Short Film about Killing”, with the long murder and the hanging scene….
Two old pictures that I have overpainted somewhat, to finish:
The Road to Mandalay
10th May 1941
Blackpaint,
2.08.15
Tags: Auerbach, Bacon at the Sainsbury Centre, Bernini, John golding, John Hoyland, Jonathan Jones, Kieslowski, Matisse, Rembrandt, Van Gogh, Velasquez
August 10, 2015 at 8:07 am |
Reblogged this on donegallizdoyle and commented:
Great commentary on Bacon with paintings I’ve not seen before, thanks