Influences on Francis Bacon

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The Massacre of the Innocents is a 1625-1632 painting by Nicolas Poussin

Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1650, by Diego Velázquez
Cimabue's Crucifix (1287–88) was a recurring influence on much of Bacon's mid-1940s and early 1960s work
Woman walking downstairs, by Eadweard Muybridge

The painter

Shakespeare; Proust and Joyce's Ulysses
.

Influences

  • Pablo Picasso, in particular the biomorphic figures in Picasso's paintings of bathers at Dinard of 1927–32.[2]
  • Nicolas Poussin's The Massacre of the Innocents Iof 1628-29. "I think probably the best human cry in painting was made by Poussin [...] which is at Chantilly. And I remember I was once with a family for about three months living very near there, trying to learn French, and I went a great deal to Chantilly and I remember this picture always made a terrific impression on me.[3]

Notes

  1. ^
  2. ^ "Chronology". francis-bacon.com. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  3. ^ [1]Francis Bacon Estate, retrieved 28 June 2009
  4. ^ "Francis Bacon Self-Portrait Study Leads Christie's NY Post-War & Contemporary Art Sale". Art Knowledge News, November 2008. Retrieved on 1 July 2009
  5. ^ David Sylvester has convincingly argued in his essay Bacon and Matisse (1996) [revised as Bacon IV in About Modern Art] for Matisse's pervasive influence on Bacon's painting.
  6. New York Review of Books
    , Volume 4, Number 4. 25 March 1965. Retrieved on 1 July 2009.

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