Lucian Freud

Sabatini Building, Floor 3
Lucian Freud. Reflection with Two Children (Self-Portrait), 1965. Oil on canvas. Museo Thyssen Bornemisza, Madrid

<p></p>

This exhibition made up of sixty works, delves into the history of Freud as a meticulous and merciless portrait painter of everything that orbits his radius of intimacy: family, friends, acquaintances, plants or the view from the window of his study. Considered by critics as the heir of the New Objectivity painting and of Stanley Spencer’s realism, Freud rejects any link to the history of recent painting and anchors his references in Frans Hals, Peter Paul Rubens and Diego Velázquez. In this way, the path from Muchacha de la rosa (1947-1948) to the series of paintings of the Australian artist Leigh Bowery (1991-1993), Freud describes a journey that starts in the obsessive use of the drawing (which leads to hard and stiff forms) and gradually turns towards: a greater freedom of movement in use of the brush-strokes, towards taking into account luminance values with compositional function (and not (rather than/as opposed to) dramatic) and into an aesthetic evaluation of the pictorial matter.

Characterised by his paintings of naked men and women lying on beds, mattresses, sofas or piles of rags, Freud avoids a sentimental or idealized reading into all his works. The real subject of his work focuses instead on changes in his erotic nature in regards to the last bastion of human beings, as expressed in: Blond Girl on a Bed (196), Naked Man on a Bed (1988) and Naked Portrait on a Red Sofa (1989-1991). In these works, the body, the object of his theme, usually occupies the largest possible area of the canvas. His portraits have a similar purpose, in seeking to perpetuate the life of the model in his paintings and declare that his desire is that the person looks like the sitter.

Read more

Artists

Lucian Freud
Curator
Catherine Lampert
Itinerary

Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (September 10 - November 21, 1993); The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (December 16, 1993 - March 27, 1994)

Organised by

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía and Whitechapel Art Gallery, London

Itinerary