Francis Bacon: Revelations

Reviews

[M]agnificent…. I was captivated by every line.…This book’s great achievement is that it does not confuse flexibility in the matter of relationships with insincerity, nor ravenous desire with decadence. Bacon, you come to understand, was fundamentally serious and fundamentally loving.
— Rachel Cooke, The Observer
 

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An Irish Times Book of the Year

There are not many biographical masterpieces, but in Revelations, the life of the Irish-born painter Francis Bacon, Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan have produced one…an utterly thrilling read.

John Banville, “The Irish Times books of the year: Writers and critics pick their favourites of 2021,” The Irish Times, Nov 30, 2021.

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Apollo Magazine Book of the Year Shortlist

Drawing on hundreds of interviews, this biography offers the fullest available account of Bacon’s life, from his upbringing in Ireland to his colourful decades in London. Stevens and Swan also shed valuable light on the painter’s early career in the years before he found success.

Apollo Awards 2021: The Shortlists: Book of the Year,” Apollo Magazine, Nov 12, 2021.

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The New Yorker: Francis Bacon’s Frightening Beauty

[Stevens and Swan] won a Pulitzer for their 2004 biography of Willem de Kooning, and the new book is a comparable achievement…. It is enormously detailed; we get the details, and the details’ details.... Stevens and Swan are very good storytellers. Also, the book is warmed by the writers’ clear affection for Bacon. They enjoy his boozy nights with him, they laugh at his jokes, and they admire his bloody-mindedness. They do not believe everything he said, and they let us know this, but they are always in his corner, and they stress virtues of his that we wouldn’t have known to look for: his gregariousness, his love of fun, his erudition, his extreme generosity. However many people were at the table, he always picked up the tab.

Joan Acocella, "Books: Francis Bacon’s Frightening Beauty." The New Yorker, May 17, 2021. This review appears in the May 24, 2021 print edition as "Books: "Art Made Flesh: The life of Francis Bacon."

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Washington Post: Bejeweled with sensuous detail

Stevens and Swan are excellent investigators, presenting novel details of Bacon’s early affairs, his short-lived interior-design career and the two years he spent in Hampshire during World War II, when asthma forced his retreat from London. The book is bejeweled with sensuous detail. . . . Bacon once said that telling his life story ‘would take a Proust.’ A tall order — though Stevens and Swan do share a Proustian eye for the social whirl and the encroachments of ‘time and the wrecking ball’…One of the achievements of Revelations is to capture this social change alongside the life of its subject. It’s a portrait of vanished worlds, of a 20th-century style of darkness now past. Our fresh horrors await new geniuses.”
— Charles Arrowsmith
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The New York Journal of Books: In top form with this biography

An engrossing portrait of the artist, his art, and his incorrigible personality. . . . [Stevens and Swan] are in top form with this biography. Their detailed analysis of Bacon’s artwork is vigorous and accessible and [. . .] as interesting as their chronicles of Bacon’s sex life, gambling, professional feuds, and glamorous art gallery fetes.
— Lew Whittington

Lew Whittington, “An Engrossing Portrait of the artist, his art, and his incorrigible personality,” The New York Journal of Books, March 30, 2021.

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The Times and Sunday Times: A “best book” of 2021

Praised in The Times as the ‘mesmerising’ and ‘definitive’ biography of Francis Bacon, this book traces the great painter’s dissolute life of booze, sexual adventure and sublime artistic achievement.
— The Times and Sunday Times

Subscription Required.

The best books of 2021: The Times and Sunday Times literary teams pick their favourites of the year so far,” The Times and Sunday Times, March 26, 2021.

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Times Literary Supplement: Lucid and Engrossing

Bacon’s life has long been a kind of myth, structured around signposts…Now, over 700 lucid and engrossing pages, Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan retrace and distil this myth, adding facts to a figure whose celebrity became, in his lifetime, a carapace and remained as a death mask…The authors give the tale a fresh momentum, a feeling of life as it happened, rather than the chiaroscuro Life that became the foundation of Bacon’s persona and the mirror image of his art…One of the many marvels of Revelations is just how present and immediate Bacon is made to seem. Even as he ebbs away, we see and hear him vividly.
— James Cahill, The Times Literary Supplement

James Cahill, “The Face of an Angel: Beyond the Myth of Francis Bacon,” The Times Literary Supplement, March 12, 2021

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Publisher’s Weekly: Written in exquisite prose

In this monumental work, Pulitzer Prize–winning art critics Stevens and Swan (De Kooning: An American Master) make a convincing case that ‘the twentieth century does not know itself without’ the work of English painter Francis Bacon (1909–1992)…Throughout, Swan and Stevens provide penetrating insights into his complex psyche, his sexuality (Bacon was gay), his friendships, and how such a ‘handsome, witty, and amiable’ person could have created paintings that many see as grotesque and even nightmarish…Full of illuminating details and written in exquisite prose, this a fascinating look at the dichotomy between an artist’s inner life and their work.

Unsigned, Publisher’s Weekly (starred review), March, 2021.

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