Sotheby's Contemporary Art evening sale to be headlined by Lucian Freud's Boy's Head of 1952
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 7, 2024


Sotheby's Contemporary Art evening sale to be headlined by Lucian Freud's Boy's Head of 1952
Lucian Freud, Untitled (foliage), 1953. Estimate: £400,000-600,000. Photo: Sotheby's.



LONDON.- Sotheby’s London announced that its Contemporary Art Evening Auction on Thursday, October 13, 2011, will be headlined by Boy's Head of 1952 by Lucian Freud (1922-2011) depicting Charlie Lumley, one of Freud's most immediatelyrecognisable subjects from this seminal early period in his oeuvre. This oil on canvas transmits a remarkable psychological intensity that is exemplary of the artist's sensational powers of observation and is estimated at £3-4 million. The work measures 21.6cm by 15.9cm and comes to market from a private collection.

Discussing this work and its auction sale, Oliver Barker, Deputy Chairman Sotheby’s Europe and Senior International Specialist in the Contemporary Art Department, said: “This portrait was executed at the beginning of the 1950s when Freud was recognised as one of the leading artistic talents of his generation and even amid the artist's epic oeuvre, spanning seven full decades, the present work is a perfect visual example of Freud’s titanic output. The young sitter, Charlie Lumley, is subjected to the unyielding dissection of Freud’s gaze in this masterful zenith of his painterly analysis, which has become the stuff of legend. We expect this oil on canvas to generate tremendous interest among the collecting community.”

In 1943 Freud moved from Abercorn Place to a flat by the Regent's Canal in Delamere Terrace, Paddington and described the areas as “…extreme and I was conscious of this. A completely unresidential area with violent neighbours. There was a sort of anarchic element of no one working for anyone... Among his neighbours were the brothers Billy and Charlie Lumley, with whom the artist forged a close friendship.

In an interview with Michael Macaulay, Sotheby’s Deputy Director and Contemporary Art Specialist, Charlie Lumley discussed sitting for Lucian Freud and how their friendship began: “Well, we used to live in Delamere Terrace, that’s on the other side of Little Venice, you know? Well it’s all pulled down now, but both houses were old Victorian houses with big balconies out the front and columns from the steps. Well we never had keys, me and my brothers, so to get in we used to have to climb up this pole, next to the pillar, onto the balcony and into the front window. And next door, the other side there lived a greengrocer, and he’d retired, and he used to sit out on the balcony all the time. And every time I used to climb up there I used to hear this deep voice murmuring “Bloody cat burglar!” And Lu moved in next door to me, and he heard this. He moved in and I went up onto the balcony, and he was standing there with John Craxton, and that’s when we first met.”

Enclosed within the glassy marbles of the boy's eyes, his depthless black pupils and serene grey-blue irises emit a hypnotic intensity that pierces out to confront and transfix the viewer. The features of the boy are physically and compositionally held in place by the palm of his left hand, which buttresses against his cheek and jaw bones. The drooping flesh of the boy's ample cheek is pulled taught by his hand, stretching the mouth open to bare the pearly young teeth below. This remarkably observed detail accentuates dramatically the psychosomatic character of the sitter. The artist's careful selection of a focused scale, consistent with works of this period, is here fundamental to its impact as it enables the maximum exertion of control over the subject. Most comparable is the legendary painting Francis Bacon of 1952, which was completed over two to three months. Boy's Head is extant counterpart to that masterpiece, providing another side of Freud's incomparable interpretation of the human animal.

Boy's Head belongs to a moment of foundational alteration in Freud's existence at a time, if not necessarily of crisis, then certainly replete with drama. His marriage to Kitty Garman, daughter of the illustrious sculptor Jacob Epstein and niece of Freud's former lover Lorna Wishart, collapsed in 1952 and they later divorced in 1953. 1952 also witnessed the advent of a new heroine in Freud's art, the 21-year old Lady Caroline Blackwood, daughter of the Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, and for whom Freud left Kitty and their young child. Together they eloped to Paris and spent most of 1953 living at the Hôtel La Louisianne, above the Buci market of St.Germain in Paris, before marrying at the Chelsea registry office on 9th December 1953, the day after his 31st birthday.

The Contemporary Art Evening Auction also includes other important works by Lucian Freud, including his Untitled (foliage), 1953, estimated at £400,000-600,000 and his Interior Drawing, The Owl, 1945, estimated at £300,000-400,000.










Today's News

September 13, 2011

Exhibition of Modern artworks in dialogue with Contemporary art at Kunstmuseum Bern

Sotheby's Contemporary Art evening sale to be headlined by Lucian Freud's Boy's Head of 1952

Personal handwritten letters by James Dean to be auctioned at Christie's for the first time

First painted portrait of American Vogue's Anna Wintour acquired by the National Portrait Gallery

Case of Los Angeles' stolen Rembrandt drawing intrigues art world with ownership issue

Miquel Barceló: Elefandret sculpture installed at Union Square in New York City

Ketterer Kunst in Munich announces sale of German Avant-Garde paintings in October

Milwaukee Art Museum acquires masterpiece of American art by John Singleton Copley

Swann Galleries to offer strong selection of American and European Works

Dagger owned by Ottoman Princess and poet married to Grand Vizier for sale at Bonhams

Two new installations by Chinese artist and film maker Yang Fudong premiere at Parasol Unit

Heritage Auctions' Long Beach September numismatic auctions total $34 million combined

Amelia Earhart goggles, photos pull in more than $31,000 at Clars Auction Gallery

Edgar Allan Poe Museum in Baltimore could close

Bellagio Gallery of Fine Art presents "A Sense of Place: Landscapes from Monet to Hockney"

1875 Gorham carved match safe 'Masterpiece,' one of only two known, expected to bring $20,000+

Ceramic vase bought for Perth Museum and Art Gallery

Bonhams sells case of Romanee Conti for 126,500 in Fine Wine sale

Historypin app lets people create a "time machine"




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful