Francis Bacon: Revelations


 

Finalist for the Plutarch Prize

The Times of London Art Book of the Year

An Irish Times Book of the Year

Shortlisted for Apollo Magazine’s Book of the Year

 

 

Named A Most Anticipated Book of 2021 by:

The Daily MailThe GuardianThe Financial TimesThe Times (UK)•The Sunday Times (UK)•The Observeri Newspaper

 

 
 

The first comprehensive look at the life and art of Francis Bacon, an iconic 20th-century figure, from the Pulitzer Prize-winning authors of de Kooning: An American Master.

UK Edition

francis-bacon-revelations-uk-edition.jpg

Francis Bacon: Revelations

Available now

Hardcover: 896 pages (705 of text)
Also in eBook and audiobook formats

UK Publisher: HarperCollins

Over 100 black-and-white photographs and 37 paintings and triptychs reproduced in full-color art folios

US Edition

francis-bacon-revelations-us-edition-564x869.jpg

Francis Bacon: Revelations

Available Now

Hardcover: 896 pages (705 of text)
Also in eBook format

US Publisher: Knopf

Over 100 black-and-white photographs and 37 paintings and triptychs reproduced in full-color art folios


Bacon played an outsized role in both the art — and the life — of his time.

In the studio, he captured the shadows of a dark century. After work, he swashbuckled through London’s Soho, a witty free spirit and unabashed homosexual during a period when many contemporaries remained closeted. (He had a laugh, a friend said, “like a Highland cock on heat.”) He was equally at home in the cockney East End of London, the literary salons of Paris, and the hedonistic worlds of Tangier and the south of France, his exploits sometimes seeming to his friends as unforgettable as his painting.

And yet, Bacon was a far more varied, nuanced, and surprising figure than the celebrated persona suggests. He concealed much about his life. Francis Bacon: Revelations — ten years in the making and based upon newly-discovered diaries, hundreds of interviews, and extensive new research in Ireland, Tangier, Spain, England and France — presents a startlingly fresh portrait of the artist. Bacon comes newly to life as an asthmatic child in Ireland; an ambitious young designer in Paris and London who dreamed of remaking the modern room; and a tormented, mostly failed painter in the 1930s.

The biography charts his subsequent successes — beginning with the stunning appearance in 1945 of Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion — but also explores with fresh insight the paradoxes of his emotional and artistic life. Bacon was not only a sexual adventurer: he also longed for a settled relationship. He was not only a bon vivant but a serious reader. He could be a shocking painter but also one of delicate melancholy. He kept up with family. He loved his friends. He was never merely bleak: he confessed to “adoring” life.

This is a story, deeply researched and masterfully told, of a sickly boy who became one of the great iconoclasts of his time. The twentieth century does not know itself without Bacon.

What’s remarkable about this biography is how extraordinarily immersive it is... When you read Francis Bacon: Revelations you are there by the artist’s side, mingling with family, friends, lovers, and the art world characters who gave the 20th century so much of its élan. Stevens and Swan are blazingly insightful on Bacon’s art itself and generous in reproducing other critics’ opinions... I have no doubt this brilliant book will come to be regarded as the definitive study of one of the 20th Century’s defining artists.
— Rowan Pelling, Perspective Magazine

Excerpt


Prologue: The Dark Century

Nietzsche forecast our future for us — he was the Cassandra of the nineteenth century. He told us it’s all so meaningless we might as well be extraordinary.
— Francis Bacon

In the spring of 1945, with much of London in rubble, Francis Bacon exhibited Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion. The painter must be a “wild man,” thought the critic John Russell, to loose such monsters upon the world. It was not their darkness per se that alarmed him. Who in 1945 did not despair? It was their peculiar darkness that was troubling. The vulturous figures were gleeful, artless, and grotesque. They all but smacked their lips. And the orange background was vile.

CONTINUE READING ▸

Photo: Snowdon / Trunk Archive

Photo: Snowdon / Trunk Archive

 Galleries


Francis Bacon, Three Studies of Lucian Freud, 1969

Francis Bacon, Three Studies of Lucian Freud, 1969

Francis Bacon at a glittering dinner the night of the private view of his 1971 show at the Grand Palais in Paris

Francis Bacon at a glittering dinner the night of the private view of his 1971 show at the Grand Palais in Paris

 

Video


What kind of man let loose such monsters…? Promotional video for Francis Bacon: Revelations.


Annalyn Swan and Mark Stevens on Francis Bacon, from "Francis Bacon: A Brush With Violence,” directed by Richard Curson Smith, ©IWC Media 2017

 

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