Wednesday, January 21, 2015

RM 100 MILLION FOR FRANCIS BACON'S '2 STUDIES FOR SELF-PORTRAIT'! A ONCE IN A LIFETIME OPPORTUNITY AWAITS THE NEW OWNER!

KEE@FSWMAG.COM

Sotheby’s London to Offer Rare Francis Bacon Double Self Portrait  

Two Studies for Self-Portrait, 1977 Could Fetch £18 Million / HK$216 Million
  
- Bacon painted only 3 self-portraits in this format - - Evocative of Bacon’s inner turmoil following death of lover -  

Francis Bacon, Two Studies for Self-Portrait, 1977, oil on canvas  

"People have been dying around me like flies and I've had nobody else to paint but myself…  I loathe my own face. One of the nicest things that Cocteau said was ‘Each day in the mirror  I watch death at work.’ This is what one does to oneself.” - Francis Bacon, 1975   
    
Francis Bacon’s (1909 – 1992) haunting self-portraits have become inseparable from how we remember the turbulent life of one of the great painters of the 20th Century.   

On 10 February 2015, as part of its flagship auction of Contemporary Art, Sotheby’s London will offer Bacon’s  hugely rare Two Studies for Self-Portrait, 1977, (est. £13 – 18 million / HK$156 – 216 million) one of only three self-portraits in this dual format to have been painted by the artist.  

In the years that followed the tragic suicide of his lover George Dyer in 1971, Bacon’s work became increasingly concerned with the dark psychological depths of his own psyche.  Painted in 1977, on an almost 1:1 scale, Two Studies for Self-Portrait is a profoundly intimate portrait, starkly evoking the artist’s inner turmoil at a moment when he was at the height of critical acclaim during his lifetime. 


Oliver Barker, Sotheby’s Deputy Chairman, Europe, said: "Of all the subjects he depicted, it is the self-portraits - painted with an almost obsessive intensity - that bring us closest to the artist.  It's this extraordinary intimacy and power, together with their rarity, that make Bacon's self-portraits so irresistible to collectors." 

Unparalleled Self-Portraiture 

Self-portraiture played a role of unparalleled importance in the work of Francis Bacon.  “He was never more brilliant, more incisive or more ferocious when it came to depicting himself. In this he helped revive a genre, and Bacon’s Self-Portraits can now be seen as among the most pictorially inventive and psychologically revealing portraits of the Twentieth Century”, wrote the renowned art historian Michael Peppiatt in 2009.   

For this reason, they are the most sought after of the artist’s works among collectors; regularly achieving prices well in advance of their estimates when they make a rare appearance at auction. 

A 1978 self-portrait, estimated at £8 – 12 million / HK$96 – 144 million, more the doubled its low estimate when it sold for £21.6 million / HK$259.2 million at Sotheby’s London in 2007, while a 1969 example, offered at Sotheby’s New York, also in 2007, fetched US$33.1 million  /  HK$258.2 million.  
  
More so than any artist since Rembrandt, Bacon’s self-portrayals tell of the existential ups and downs of an extraordinarily dramatic life, starkly punctuated by tragedy.  From the suicide of his friend John Minton in 1957 to the death of his decade-long lover Peter Lacy in 1962; the tragic suicide of his lover George Dyer in 1971 and the death of his mother, Winnie Bacon, in the same year.  

Summoning a lifetime’s worth of memories, Two Studies for Self-Portrait, 1977, shows Bacon at his most self-reflective and at the peak of his powers as a painter.  


In one of his celebrated interviews with the art critic David Sylvester, Bacon was brutally honest about his increasing propensity toward self-portraiture: "People have been dying around me like flies and I've had nobody else to paint but myself… I loathe my own face. One of the nicest things that Cocteau said was ‘Each day in the mirror I watch death at work.’  This is what one does to oneself.”  
   
Seeing Double  

Bacon only ever made three self-portrait diptychs in this format (35.5cm by 30cm), of which this is the only example to have ever appeared at auction. The immediacy and intimacy of Bacon’s smaller scale (almost 1:1) portraits ensures that they are hugely coveted by collectors.  

This was most recently in evidence when a new record for any small – scale portrait by Bacon was set in June 2014. The triptych, Three Studies for Portrait of George Dyer, sold at Sotheby’s London for £26.7 million / HK$320.4 million, well in excess of its high estimate of £20 million / HK$240 million. 

Francis Bacon, Three Studies for Portrait of George Dyer (on light ground), 1964, sold for £26.7 million / HK$320.4 million at Sotheby’s London in June 2014, setting a new record for a Bacon triptych  

No comments: