HOUSTON, TX.- The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, presents Francis Bacon: Late Paintings. Organized by the Centre Pompidou, where it debuted in September 2019, this is the first in-depth museum consideration of Bacons production in his final decades, and the first museum exhibition of the artists work to be seen in the U.S. since the Metropolitan Museum of Arts 2009 retrospective in New York. The exhibition is on view in Houston from February 23 through May 25, 2020.
We are profoundly pleased to partner with the Centre Pompidou and their curator Didier Ottinger to bring to the United States this landmark survey of Francis Bacons late work, said Gary Tinterow, Director, The Margaret Alkek Williams Chair, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. This will be Houstons first exhibition of the artist, and by focusing on the achievements of his final decades, we can best understand the resolution he brought to many of his long-standing concerns and his enduring commitment to the power of painting.
Francis Bacon (19091992) was a leading figure in 20th-century British art: celebrated, scandalous, and profoundly influential. In 1971, he was at a turning point in his career as he prepared for a major retrospective mounted at the Grand Palais in Paris. The paintings that led up to this exhibition are among those featured in the Houston presentation, including Portrait of George Dyer in a Mirror, 1968, and Triptych, 1970. The installation will also open with a series of self-portraits, introducing Bacons vivid presence at a time when he stated [I have] no one else to paint. Also on view will be portraits of his close contemporaries, including the poet Michel Leiris, who observed: [Bacons paintings] help us, most powerfully, to feel the sheer fact of existence as it is sensed by a man without illusions.
On October 24, 1971two days before the opening of Bacons Grand Palais retrospective Georges Dyer, his companion of many years, died by suicide in a Paris hotel. Over the decade that followed, Bacon repeatedly paid tribute to Dyer in an ongoing series of paintings. The exhibition pairs two of his most powerful triptychs dedicated to Dyer, the harrowing In Memory of George Dyer, 1971, and Triptych August 1972, 1972. Introducing one of the exhibitions central themes, the immediacy of experience and the role of memory, these paintings also touch on Bacons literary sources, which ranged from the Greek tragedies of Aeschylus to the contemporary writings of T. S. Eliot and Jean-Paul Sartre.
While Dyer remained Bacons most troubling muse, Bacon also branched out into new directions as well, including landscapes, a genre he had abandoned altogether between 1963 and 1978. His landscapes of the 1980s are particularly bold, reconciling the tension between abstraction and representation that animated the artists work across his career. Bacon also introduced a fresh astringency to these late works, deserting his densely layered compositions for a new clarity of line and color, which can be seen in Street Scene (with Car in Distance), 1984, and Painting March 1985, 1985.
In Bacons final paintings, figures become all the more vulnerable, nearly consumed by the empty fields of raw canvas or flat color that surround them. Francis Bacon: Late Paintings will include his final triptych of 1991, as well as Study of a Bull, 1991, his last completed painting. Unseen for more than two decades, it resurfaced a few years ago from a private London collection and has been shown only once prior to this exhibition. In ill health and near the end of his life, Bacon unflinchingly faced mortality. Dust seems to be eternal . . . the one thing that lasts forever, he stated. We all return to dust, a sentiment underscored by the dust of his studio floor that he rubbed into this canvas.
Bacons coming of age was bracketed by two world wars, and he found in the human form a vessel for beauty and tragedy, said Alison de Lima Greene, the Isabel Brown Wilson Curator at the MFAH. He celebrated the bodys corporeal physicality, while using his brush with greater and greater economy in his final paintings. We see him strip his subjects to their most essential features, laying bare their psychological truths.