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Revisions: Francis Bacon in the Act of Painting

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An indispensable supplement to Francis Bacon: Catalogue Raisonné, uncovering valuable new information about the artist's practice

Overview

The manner in which Bacon’s paintings evolved was misunderstood during his lifetime. Since he always painted alone in his studios, there were no witnesses to the emergence of his visceral imagery. His insistence on privacy helped generate considerable speculation about his painting process, most of it erroneous.

Bacon did make one clear statement about the genesis of his paintings: ‘I sketch out very roughly on the canvas with a brush, just a vague outline of something, and then I go to work…’. Yet this fundamentally accurate summation of his technique ran counter to the received wisdom and was misunderstood or ignored.

Martin Harrison's introductory essay begins by demonstrating exactly what Bacon meant, and what he did: it will show what ‘rough sketching’ signified. It also deploys X-ray and infrared images that reveal under-drawing, and analyses other features that elucidate Bacon’s methodology. Photographs of paintings briefly arrested at intermediate points before completion – taken by the few visitors to the studio allowed the privilege – help to explain later stages in painting process.

Sophie Pretorius's survey incorporates every one of the images that have hitherto remained unseen, illustrating the transitional states of all the paintings recorded in photographs, arranged thematically.

A reference section includes thumbnail images of all the paintings discussed here, arranged in chronological order. This is consistent with the layout of Francis Bacon: Catalogue Raisonné (2016), to which this volume may be regarded as a supplement, publishing significant new information.

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Product Information

Book Details

Format: Hardback

Size: 31.5 x 25.0 cm

Extent: 160 pp

Illustrations: 200

Publication date: 7 November 2024

ISBN: 9780500966280

Contents List

Structure
Introduction - The Act of Painting: Martin Harrison
Changes: Sophie Pretorius
The main survey is arranged thematically, in eleven sections:
1. Erasures – Painting out figures and devices
2. Violations – Adding patches of colour, especially black, and gouging out
3. Remodels – Changing pose and facial expression
4. Shades – Changing colour of background and elements of foreground
5. Substitutions – Replacing canvases entirely, and collage
6. Separations – Moving panels away from and towards each other; cropping canvases
7. Insertions – Insertion of figures and devices
8. Saturations – Saturating/filling in outlines
9. Elaborations – Adding detail
10. Refinements – Minor changes and invisible but purported changes

About the Author

Martin Harrison is one of the foremost scholars of Francis Bacon, and the editor of Francis Bacon: Catalogue Raisonné. Sophie Pretorius is Archivist of the Estate’s Bacon collection, and has transcribed all Bacon’s surviving medical records.