Francis Bacon
Francis Bacon (1909-92) Beginning on the
early 1950s, despite the dominance of
Abstract Expressionism in both the
United States and Europe, there were
recurring waves of insistence on a
return to the figure, a new naturalism of
naturalistic fantasy. Crucial to
the new figuration were Alberto Giacometti and
Jean Dubuffet. The only
other figurative Expressionist powerful enough to be
compared with Giacometti
and Dubuffet were British. Chief among these was the
Irish-born Francis
Bacon, one of the artistic giants of his time. Bacon has been
called the
greatest poet of the second half of the 20th century and even those
who
deeply dislike his work find it memorable and horribly impressive. He is
an
artist obsessed by the horror of existence and the terrible vulnerability
of
being. He professed to see no hope, and yet his very life is a denial of
such
despair, because creativity can never really come without some belief in
the
meaning of what is created. Certain images recur again and again in
Bacon’s
paintings, and the best known is that of the screaming pope, after
Velazquez’s
great portrait of Pope Innocent X. Bacon refused to study
Velazquez’s
portrait, preferring instead to paint from his memory of that
painting’s
authoritarian majesty. Here, he shows the pope, father of the
Catholic Church,
both enthroned and imprisioned by his position. Bacon’s
relationship with his
father was a very stormy one, and perhaps he has used
some of the fear and
hatred to conjure up this ghostly vision of a screaming
pope, his face frozen in
a rictus of anguish. The pope is pushed down to the
bottom half of the canvas
and squashed low in the chair. Around him, bacon
has built the suggestion of a
cage or cell. He has marked him out with an
arrow, as if this clenched and
tortured image was an exhibit in the artist’s
chamber of horrors. Bacon has
also drawn from another famous image,
Rembrant’s great Carcass of Beef, and
his hung the animal’s flayed and bloody
flesh on either side of this human
animal. Rembrant painted his carcass with
reverence; Bacon sees these carcasses
as raw meat - the pope as he will be -
dangles them, almost insouciantly, behind
the papal chair. Bacon’s portraits
are just as unique as when he uses
paintings of the past as the basis of his
work, and transforms these in terms of
his own inward vision of torment. He
insisted on painting portraits only of his
friends, and Lucien Freud was one
of his closest. He insisted too that he did
not want to paint his subjects
from life, but from photographs, and the absence
of the actual person set him
free to mold and deform with a wild virtuosity.
Here, he seems to have
painted the portrait, and then, perhaps with his figure
or thumb, smeared out
the features of the face; yet, despite this arrogance with
paint and feature,
enough significant traces remain to recognize the face of the
sitter. In the
late 1940s and the 1950s there was a deliberate and concerted
attempt to
reintroduce subject matter figures, most frequently in a macabre
effect.
Along with Giacometti and Dubuffet, Frances Bacon was a major
contributor to
the postwar European figuration and fantasy movement. His
devotion to the
monstrous, the deformed. or the diseased has been variously
interpreted as a
reaction to the plight of the world and humanity. His paintings
reveal his
superb qualities as a pure painter and his obsessive sense of
tradition.