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Lucian Freud

Lucian Michael Freud OM CH[1] (/frɔɪd/; 8 December 1922 – 20 July 2011) was a British painter and draughtsman, specialising in figurative art, and is known as one of the foremost 20th-century English portraitists. He was born in Berlin, the son of Jewish architect Ernst L. Freud and the grandson of Sigmund Freud. Freud got his first name "Lucian" from his mother in memory of the ancient writer Lucian of Samosata. His family moved to England in 1933, when he was 10 years old, to escape the rise of Nazism. He became a British naturalized citizen in 1939. From 1942 to 1943 he attended Goldsmiths College, London. He served at sea with the British Merchant Navy during the Second World War.

Lucian Freud

Lucian Freud
Born
Lucian Michael Freud

(1922-12-08)8 December 1922
Berlin, Germany
Died20 July 2011(2011-07-20) (aged 88)
London, England
EducationDartington Hall School
Bryanston School
Central School of Art
Alma materEast Anglian School of Painting and Drawing
Goldsmiths' College
Notable work
Spouse(s)
(m. 1948; div. 1952)

(m. 1952; div. 1959)
Childrenvarious; including Annie, Esther and Bella
Parents
RelativesFreud family

His early career as a painter was influenced by surrealism, but by the early 1950s his often stark and alienated paintings tended towards realism.[2] Freud was an intensely private and guarded man, and his paintings, completed over a 60-year career, are mostly of friends and family. They are generally sombre and thickly impastoed, often set in unsettling interiors and urban landscapes. The works are noted for their psychological penetration and often discomforting examination of the relationship between artist and model. Freud worked from life studies, and was known for asking for extended and punishing sittings from his models.[3]

Early life and family

Born in Berlin, Freud was the son of a German Jewish mother, Lucie (née Brasch), and an Austrian Jewish father, Ernst L. Freud, an architect who was the fourth child of Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud.[4] Lucian, the second of their three boys, was the elder brother of the broadcaster, writer and politician Clement Freud (thus uncle of Emma and Matthew Freud) and the younger brother of Stephan Gabriel Freud.

The family emigrated to St John's Wood, London, in 1933 to escape the rise of Nazism. Lucian became a British subject in 1939,[4][5] having attended Dartington Hall School in Totnes, Devon, and later Bryanston School,[6][7] for a year before being expelled owing to disruptive behaviour.[8]

Early career

Freud briefly studied at the Central School of Art in London, and from 1939 to 1942 with greater success at Cedric Morris' East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing in Dedham, relocated in 1940 to Benton End, a house near Hadleigh, Suffolk. He also attended Goldsmiths' College, part of the University of London, in 1942–43. He served as a merchant seaman in an Atlantic convoy in 1941 before being invalided out of service in 1942.

In 1943, the poet and editor Meary James Thurairajah Tambimuttu commissioned the young artist to illustrate a book of poems by Nicholas Moore entitled The Glass Tower. It was published the following year by Editions Poetry London and comprised, among other drawings, a stuffed zebra and a palm tree. Both subjects reappeared in The Painter's Room on display at Freud's first solo exhibition in 1944 at the Lefevre Gallery. In the summer of 1946, he travelled to Paris before continuing to Greece for several months to visit John Craxton.[9] In the early fifties he was a frequent visitor to Dublin where he would share Patrick Swift's studio.[10] He remained a Londoner for the rest of his life.

Freud was one of a number of figurative artists who were later characterised by artist R. B. Kitaj as a group named the "School of London".[11][12] This group was a loose collection of individual artists who knew each other, some intimately, and were working in London at the same time in the figurative style. The group was active contemporaneously with the boom years of abstract painting and in contrast to abstract expressionism. Major figures in the group included Freud, Kitaj, Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach, Michael Andrews, Leon Kossoff, Robert Colquhoun, Robert MacBryde, and Reginald Gray. Freud was a visiting tutor at the Slade School of Fine Art of University College London from 1949 to 1954.

Mature style

 
Girl with a White Dog, 1951–1952, Tate Gallery. Portrait of Freud's first wife, Kitty Garman, the daughter of Jacob Epstein and Kathleen Garman

Freud's early paintings, which are mostly very small, are often associated with German Expressionism (an influence he tended to deny) and Surrealism in depicting people, plants and animals in unusual juxtapositions. Some very early works anticipate the varied flesh tones of his mature style, for example Cedric Morris (1940, National Museum of Wales), but after the end of the war he developed a thinly painted very precise linear style with muted colours, best known in his self-portrait Man with a Thistle (1946, Tate)[13] and a series of large-eyed portraits of his first wife, Kitty Garman, such as Girl with a Kitten (1947, Tate).[14] These were painted with tiny sable brushes and evoke Early Netherlandish painting.[13]

From the 1950s, he began to focus on portraiture, often nudes (though his first full-length nude was not painted until 1966),[15] to the almost complete exclusion of everything else, and by the middle of the decade developed a much more free style using large hog's-hair brushes, concentrating on the texture and colour of flesh, and much thicker paint, including impasto. Girl with a White Dog, 1951–1952, (Tate) is an example of a transitional work in this process, sharing many characteristics with paintings before and after it, with relatively tight brushwork and a middling size and viewpoint. He would often clean his brush after each stroke when painting flesh, so that the colour remained constantly variable. He also started to paint standing up, which continued until old age, when he switched to a high chair.[15] The colours of non-flesh areas in these paintings are typically muted, while the flesh becomes increasingly highly and variably coloured. By about 1960, Freud had established the style that he would use, with some changes, for the rest of his career. The later portraits often use an over life-size scale, but are of mostly relatively small heads or in half-lengths. Later portraits are often much larger. In his late career he often followed a portrait by producing an etching of the subject in a different pose, drawing directly onto the plate, with the sitter in his view.[16]

Freud's portraits often depict only the sitter, sometimes sprawled naked on the floor or on a bed or alternatively juxtaposed with something else, as in Girl With a White Dog (1951–52) and Naked Man With Rat (1977–78).[17] According to Edward Chaney, "The distinctive, recumbent manner in which Freud poses so many of his sitters suggests the conscious or unconscious influence both of his grandfather's psychoanalytical couch and of the Egyptian mummy, his dreaming figures, clothed or nude, staring into space until (if ever) brought back to health and/or consciousness. The particular application of this supine pose to freaks, friends, wives, mistresses, dogs, daughters and mother alike (the latter regularly depicted after her suicide attempt and eventually, literally mummy-like in death), tends to support this hypothesis."[18]

The use of animals in his compositions is widespread, and often he features a pet and its owner. Other examples of portraits with both animals and people in Freud's work include Guy and Speck (1980–81), Eli and David (2005–06) and Double Portrait (1985–86).[19] He had a special passion for horses, having enjoyed riding at school in Dartington, where he sometimes slept in the stables.[20] His portraits solely of horses include Grey Gelding (2003), Skewbald Mare (2004), and Mare Eating Hay (2006). Wilting houseplants feature prominently in some portraits, especially in the 1960s, and Freud also produced a number of paintings purely of plants.[21] Other regular features included mattresses in earlier works, and huge piles of the linen rags with which he used to clean his brushes in later ones.[22] Some portraits, especially in the 1980s, have very carefully painted views of London roofscapes seen through the studio windows.[23]

Freud's subjects, who needed to make a very large and uncertain commitment of their time, were often the people in his life; friends, family, fellow painters, lovers, children. He said, "The subject matter is autobiographical, it's all to do with hope and memory and sensuality and involvement, really."[24] However the titles were mostly anonymous, and the identity of the sitter not always disclosed; the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire had a portrait of one of Freud's daughters as a baby for several years before he mentioned who the model was. In the 1970s Freud spent 4,000 hours on a series of paintings of his mother, about which art historian Lawrence Gowing observed "it is more than 300 years since a painter showed as directly and as visually his relationship with his mother. And that was Rembrandt."[25]

Freud painted from life, and usually spent a great deal of time with each subject, demanding the model's presence even while working on the background of the portrait. Ria, Naked Portrait 2007, a nude completed in 2007, required sixteen months of work, with the model, Ria Kirby, posing all but four evenings during that time. With each session averaging five hours, the painting took approximately 2,400 hours to complete.[26] A rapport with his models was necessary, and while at work, Freud was characterised as "an outstanding raconteur and mimic".[26] Regarding the difficulty in deciding when a painting is completed, Freud said that "he feels he's finished when he gets the impression he's working on somebody else's painting".[26] Paintings were divided into day paintings done in natural light and night paintings done under artificial light, and the sessions, and lighting, were never mixed.[27]

It was Freud's practice to begin a painting by first drawing in charcoal on the canvas. He then applied paint to a small area of the canvas, and gradually worked outward from that point. For a new sitter, he often started with the head as a means of "getting to know" the person, then painted the rest of the figure, eventually returning to the head as his comprehension of the model deepened.[26] A section of canvas was intentionally left bare until the painting was finished.[26] The finished painting is an accumulation of richly worked layers of pigment, as well as months of intense observation.[26]

Later career

 
Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, 1995, a very large portrait of "Big Sue" Tilley, showing his handling of flesh tones, and a typical high viewpoint

Freud painted fellow artists, including Frank Auerbach and Francis Bacon and produced a large number of portraits of the performance artist Leigh Bowery. He also painted Henrietta Moraes, a muse to many Soho artists. A series of huge nude portraits from the mid-1990s depicted Sue Tilley, or "Big Sue", some using her job title of "Benefits Supervisor" in the title of the painting,[28] as in his 1995 portrait Benefits Supervisor Sleeping, which in May 2008 was sold by Christie's in New York for $33.6 million, setting a world record auction price for a living artist.[29][30]

Freud's most consistent model in his later years was his studio assistant and friend David Dawson, the subject of his final, unfinished work.[31] Towards the end of his life he did a nude portrait of model Kate Moss. Freud was one of the best known British artists working in a representational style, and was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 1989.[32][33]

 
After Cézanne, 1999–2000, National Gallery of Australia

His painting After Cézanne, noteworthy because of its unusual shape, was purchased by the National Gallery of Australia for $7.4 million. The top left section of this painting has been 'grafted' on to the main section below, and closer inspection reveals a horizontal line where these two sections were joined.[34]

In 1996, the Abbot Hall Art Gallery in Kendal mounted a major exhibition of 27 paintings and thirteen etchings, covering Freud's output to date. The following year the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art presented "Lucian Freud: Early Works". The exhibition comprised around 30 drawings and paintings done between 1940 and 1945.[35] In 1997 Freud received the Rubens Prize of the city of Siegen.[36] From September 2000 to March 2001, the Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt was able to show 50 paintings, drawings and etchings from the late 1940s to 2000 in a larger overview exhibition despite the artist's considerable resentment towards Germany.[37] All print media bore the motif of Freud's outstanding painting Sleeping by the Lion Carpet (1995-1996) depicting the nude Sue Tilley.[38] In addition to some of his most important nude portraits of women, the large-format picture Nude with leg up (Leigh Bowery) from 1992 was also shown in Frankfurt, which was removed in the Metropolitan Museum New York from the exhibition in 1993.[39] The Frankfurt exhibition was realised in a personal dialogue between curator Rolf Lauter and Lucian Freud and is thus the only project Freud authorised in direct cooperation with a German museum.[40] The major retrospective at London's Hayward Gallery in 1988 was the focal point for the BBC Omnibus programme which saw one of the very few conversations with Freud ever recorded, in this case with Omnibus director Jake Auerbach.[41] The conversations with the artist were made possible by Duncan MacGuigan from Acquavella Galleries New York. This was followed by a large retrospective at Tate Britain in 2002. In 2001, Freud completed a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II. There was criticism of the portrayal in some sections of the British media.[42] In 2005, a retrospective of Freud's work was held at the Museo Correr in Venice scheduled to coincide with the Biennale. In late 2007, a collection of etchings went on display at the Museum of Modern Art.[43]

 
Grave of Lucian Freud at Highgate Cemetery

Freud died in London on 20 July 2011 and is buried in Highgate Cemetery. Archbishop Rowan Williams officiated at the private funeral.[44]

Art market

In 2008 Benefits Supervisor Sleeping (1995), a portrait of civil servant Sue Tilley, sold for $33.6 million – the highest price ever at the time for a work by a living artist. At a Christie's New York auction in 2015, Benefits Supervisor Resting sold for $56.2 million.[45][46] On 13 October 2011, his 1952 Boy's Head, a small portrait of Charlie Lumley, his neighbour, reached $4,998,088 at Sotheby's London contemporary art evening auction, making it one of the highlights of the 2011 auction autumn season.[47]

On 10 November 2015 Freud's 2004 painting The Brigadier, a portrait of Andrew Parker Bowles in his British Royal Army uniform, sold for $34.89 million US at Christie's in New York City, beating the $30 million US presale estimate for the work.[48]

Personal life

In the 1940s Freud and fellow artists Adrian Ryan and John Minton were in a homosexual love triangle.[49] After an affair with Lorna Garman, he went on to marry, in 1948, her niece Kitty Garman, daughter of sculptor Jacob Epstein and socialite Kathleen Garman. They had two daughters, Annabel Freud and the poet Annie Freud, before their marriage ended in 1952.[50] Kitty Freud, later known as Kitty Godley (after her marriage in 1955 to economist Wynne Godley), died in 2011.[51]

In late 1952, Freud eloped with Guinness heiress and writer Lady Caroline Blackwood to Paris, where they married in 1953; they divorced in 1959.[50]

Freud is rumoured to have fathered as many as forty children[52] although this number is generally accepted as an exaggeration. Fourteen children have been identified, two from Freud's first marriage and 12 by various mistresses.[53] Writer Esther Freud and fashion designer Bella Freud are his daughters by Bernadine Coverley.

Selected solo exhibitions

References

  1. ^ "Lucian Freud, OM". The Daily Telegraph. London. 21 July 2011. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 8 March 2020. Freud was appointed a Companion of Honour in 1983, and a member of the Order of Merit in 1993.
  2. ^ "Lucian Freud 1922–2011. Tate. Retrieved October 2016
  3. ^ Smith, Roberta (14 December 2007). "Lucian Freud Stripped Bare". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  4. ^ a b Spurling, John (13 December 1998). "Portrait of the artist as a happy man". The Independent. Retrieved 19 June 2010.
  5. ^ "No. 34708". The London Gazette. 13 October 1939. p. 6866.
  6. ^ . Bryanston Art: Past and Present. Bryanston School. 12 October 2008. Archived from the original on 28 September 2011. Retrieved 25 July 2011.
  7. ^ . Bryanston. Bryanston School. 8 February 2012. Archived from the original on 13 November 2012. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  8. ^ "Obituary: Lucian Freud, OM". The Daily Telegraph. London. 21 July 2011. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 20 February 2012.
  9. ^ "From late 1946 to early 1947, he and Freud painted on Poros" – John Craxton Guardian Obituary
  10. ^ "He had met Freud by 1949...the acquaintance was well-developed by 1950 when we shared the ground-floor of a house in Hatch Street together. Lucian, who was staying in Ireland, used to come around in the mornings to paint, so that sometimes when I would surface around ten or eleven I would find them both at work in the studio next door." – Anthony Cronin, Patrick Swift (1927–83), IMMA Retrospective Catalogue, 1993; "Freud… came to Dublin in 1948… In September 1951 Kitty Garman wrote to her mother… She mentions Freud working on a painting in Paddy Swift's Hatch Street studio, Dead Cock's Head 1951" – Freud: Prophet of Discomfort 19 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Mic Moroney, Irish Arts Review, 2007
  11. ^ "Art term: The School of London". tate.org. 10 April 2017. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  12. ^ Kitaj's essay in the catalogue for The Human Clay exhibition, Hayward Gallery, London, 1976.
  13. ^ a b Tate, Man with a Thistle
  14. ^ Tate, Girl with a Kitten
  15. ^ a b NPG, II
  16. ^ NPG, "Etchings"
  17. ^ "Naked Man With Rat". Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  18. ^ Edward Chaney, 'Freudian Egypt', The London Magazine (April/May 2006), pp. 62–69, complete refs in Chaney, Edward (2006). 'Egypt in England and America: The Cultural Memorials of Religion, Royalty and Religion', Sites of Exchange: European Crossroads and Faultlines, eds. M. Ascari and A. Corrado. Amsterdam and New York: Rodopi, pp. 39–69.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  20. ^ Gayford, Martin "Freud's Animals" 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Apollo, 2006-11-01. Retrieved 2009-06-05.
  21. ^ Tate, Two Plants 1977–80
  22. ^ NPG, VII; Tate, Standing by the Rags, 1988-9
  23. ^ NPG, IV & 25
  24. ^ "Lucian Freud" 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine, British Council, 2009. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
  25. ^ Jones, Jerene (24 April 1978). "Is Lucian Freud's Relationship with Mother Odd, or Is It Art?". People. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  26. ^ a b c d e f Gayford, Martin (22 September 2007). "Gayford, Martin. Lucian Freud: marathon man". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 22 July 2011.
  27. ^ NPG, V
  28. ^ NPG, 33; Etching, Tate
  29. ^ "Freud work sets new world record". BBC News. 14 May 2008. Retrieved 14 May 2008.
  30. ^ Lucian Freud: From "Ingres of Existentialism" to Impasto Master BLOUINARTINFO.COM
  31. ^ Mark Brown, "Lucian Freud's final work to be shown in 2012 National Portrait Gallery show", The Guardian, 20 September 2011. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  32. ^ Tate. "Turner Prize 1989 – Exhibition at Tate Britain – Tate". Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  33. ^ "Turner Prize 1985 artists: Terry Atkinson – Tate". Retrieved 19 November 2016.
  34. ^ Lampert, Catherine; Lauter, Rolf; (2001). Lucian Freud: After Cézanne, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, 2001. Australia: National Gallery of Australia. p. 24. ISBN 0642541477.
  35. ^ Richard Calvocoressi, Lucian Freud: Early Works, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, 1997. ISBN 0-903598-66-3
  36. ^ Lauter, Rolf : Lucian Freud, in: 10x Malerei. Rubenspreis der Stadt Siegen in Werken der Sammlung Lambrecht-Schadeberg, Siegen 2002, ISBN 3-935874-03-0
  37. ^ The negative attitude towards Germany came on the one hand due to the National Socialists' forced flight of the family from their beloved Berlin to London, and on the other hand due to the theft of his portrait of Francis Bacon, which was stolen from the traveling exhibition in the Neue Nationalgalerie Berlin in 1988.
  38. ^ Lauter, Rolf (2001). "Lucian Freud, naked portraits". collections.britishart.yale.edu. Retrieved 4 February 2020.
  39. ^ Lauter, Rolf (ed.): Lucian Freud: Naked Portraits. Werke der 40er bis 90er Jahre [Lucian Freud: Naked Portraits. Works from the 1940s to the 1990s], Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main, 29.09.2000-04.03.2001. ISBN 9783775790437
  40. ^ In 1987 the British Council organised a retrospective for the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, DC, which was subsequently shown in the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris, in the Hayward Gallery London and in the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin.
  41. ^ "Omnibus – Lucian Freud".
  42. ^ "Freud royal portrait divides critics". BBC News. 21 December 2001. Retrieved 26 February 2008.
  43. ^ Ayers, Robert (18 December 2007). "Curator's Voice: Starr Figura on Lucian Freud's Etchings". BLOUINARTINFO. Retrieved 23 April 2008.
  44. ^ Feaver, William (January 2015). "Freud, Lucian Michael (1922–2011)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/103935. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  45. ^ "Lucian Freud (1922–2011), Benefits Supervisor Resting". christies.com. Retrieved 9 February 2019.
  46. ^ Katya Kazakina (14 May 2015), Freud's Lounging Naked Civil Servant Sells for $56.2 Million Bloomberg Business.
  47. ^ Sotheby's October 2011 Evening Sales of 20th Century Italian Art and Contemporary Art Total £39.5/$62/€45 Million Sotheby's Press Release 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine.
  48. ^ "Lucian Freud portrait of Camilla's ex-husband sells for nearly $35m". The Guardian. 11 November 2015.
  49. ^ Brown, Mark (10 July 2021). "Exhibition brings to light young Freud's love triangle". The Guardian. London. p. 25.
  50. ^ a b "Face to face with Freud". The Sunday Times. 22 May 2005.
  51. ^ David Kamp, "Freud, Interrupted", Vanity Fair, February 2012, page 148.
  52. ^ "Freud the Lothario", Simon Edge, Daily Express, 16 May 2008.
  53. ^ David Kamp, "Freud, Interrupted", Vanity Fair, February 2012, page 147.

Further reading

External video
  Lucian Freud, Standing by the Rags, 1988–89, Smarthistory

External links

  • 50 artworks by or after Lucian Freud at the Art UK site
  • Lucian Freud exhibition (English), Press release/exhibition booklet, Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien, Vienna, 2014
  • 2002 exhibition at Tate Britain including a room guide
  • Freud at Tate Britain
  • Essay by Kelly Grovier on Lucian Freud in The Observer 2006
  • Charles Finch on Lucian Freud – MoMA: Museum of Modern Art, New York City
  • (in French) Lucian Freud – Centre Pompidou, Paris
  • Lucian Freud: L'Atelier (The Studio) / Centre Pompidou, Paris Video 2010
  • Smee, Sebastian (31 July 2011). "Lucian Freud up close". The Boston Globe.
  • Channel Four News Interview with Lucian Freud on the campaign to keep Titian paintings in Britain 2008
  • Lucian Freud from another perspective. A major exhibition coming to Madrid (2023)

lucian, freud, lucian, michael, freud, ɔɪ, december, 1922, july, 2011, british, painter, draughtsman, specialising, figurative, known, foremost, 20th, century, english, portraitists, born, berlin, jewish, architect, ernst, freud, grandson, sigmund, freud, freu. Lucian Michael Freud OM CH 1 f r ɔɪ d 8 December 1922 20 July 2011 was a British painter and draughtsman specialising in figurative art and is known as one of the foremost 20th century English portraitists He was born in Berlin the son of Jewish architect Ernst L Freud and the grandson of Sigmund Freud Freud got his first name Lucian from his mother in memory of the ancient writer Lucian of Samosata His family moved to England in 1933 when he was 10 years old to escape the rise of Nazism He became a British naturalized citizen in 1939 From 1942 to 1943 he attended Goldsmiths College London He served at sea with the British Merchant Navy during the Second World War Lucian FreudOM CHLucian FreudBornLucian Michael Freud 1922 12 08 8 December 1922Berlin GermanyDied20 July 2011 2011 07 20 aged 88 London EnglandEducationDartington Hall SchoolBryanston SchoolCentral School of ArtAlma materEast Anglian School of Painting and DrawingGoldsmiths CollegeNotable workCedric Morris 1940 Portrait of Kitty 1948 49 Benefits Supervisor Sleeping 1995 Spouse s Kathleen Epstein m 1948 div 1952 wbr Lady Caroline Blackwood m 1952 div 1959 wbr Childrenvarious including Annie Esther and BellaParentsErnst L FreudLucie BraschRelativesFreud familyHis early career as a painter was influenced by surrealism but by the early 1950s his often stark and alienated paintings tended towards realism 2 Freud was an intensely private and guarded man and his paintings completed over a 60 year career are mostly of friends and family They are generally sombre and thickly impastoed often set in unsettling interiors and urban landscapes The works are noted for their psychological penetration and often discomforting examination of the relationship between artist and model Freud worked from life studies and was known for asking for extended and punishing sittings from his models 3 Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Early career 3 Mature style 4 Later career 5 Art market 6 Personal life 7 Selected solo exhibitions 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and family EditBorn in Berlin Freud was the son of a German Jewish mother Lucie nee Brasch and an Austrian Jewish father Ernst L Freud an architect who was the fourth child of Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud 4 Lucian the second of their three boys was the elder brother of the broadcaster writer and politician Clement Freud thus uncle of Emma and Matthew Freud and the younger brother of Stephan Gabriel Freud The family emigrated to St John s Wood London in 1933 to escape the rise of Nazism Lucian became a British subject in 1939 4 5 having attended Dartington Hall School in Totnes Devon and later Bryanston School 6 7 for a year before being expelled owing to disruptive behaviour 8 Early career EditFreud briefly studied at the Central School of Art in London and from 1939 to 1942 with greater success at Cedric Morris East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing in Dedham relocated in 1940 to Benton End a house near Hadleigh Suffolk He also attended Goldsmiths College part of the University of London in 1942 43 He served as a merchant seaman in an Atlantic convoy in 1941 before being invalided out of service in 1942 In 1943 the poet and editor Meary James Thurairajah Tambimuttu commissioned the young artist to illustrate a book of poems by Nicholas Moore entitled The Glass Tower It was published the following year by Editions Poetry London and comprised among other drawings a stuffed zebra and a palm tree Both subjects reappeared in The Painter s Room on display at Freud s first solo exhibition in 1944 at the Lefevre Gallery In the summer of 1946 he travelled to Paris before continuing to Greece for several months to visit John Craxton 9 In the early fifties he was a frequent visitor to Dublin where he would share Patrick Swift s studio 10 He remained a Londoner for the rest of his life Freud was one of a number of figurative artists who were later characterised by artist R B Kitaj as a group named the School of London 11 12 This group was a loose collection of individual artists who knew each other some intimately and were working in London at the same time in the figurative style The group was active contemporaneously with the boom years of abstract painting and in contrast to abstract expressionism Major figures in the group included Freud Kitaj Francis Bacon Frank Auerbach Michael Andrews Leon Kossoff Robert Colquhoun Robert MacBryde and Reginald Gray Freud was a visiting tutor at the Slade School of Fine Art of University College London from 1949 to 1954 Mature style Edit Girl with a White Dog 1951 1952 Tate Gallery Portrait of Freud s first wife Kitty Garman the daughter of Jacob Epstein and Kathleen Garman Freud s early paintings which are mostly very small are often associated with German Expressionism an influence he tended to deny and Surrealism in depicting people plants and animals in unusual juxtapositions Some very early works anticipate the varied flesh tones of his mature style for example Cedric Morris 1940 National Museum of Wales but after the end of the war he developed a thinly painted very precise linear style with muted colours best known in his self portrait Man with a Thistle 1946 Tate 13 and a series of large eyed portraits of his first wife Kitty Garman such as Girl with a Kitten 1947 Tate 14 These were painted with tiny sable brushes and evoke Early Netherlandish painting 13 From the 1950s he began to focus on portraiture often nudes though his first full length nude was not painted until 1966 15 to the almost complete exclusion of everything else and by the middle of the decade developed a much more free style using large hog s hair brushes concentrating on the texture and colour of flesh and much thicker paint including impasto Girl with a White Dog 1951 1952 Tate is an example of a transitional work in this process sharing many characteristics with paintings before and after it with relatively tight brushwork and a middling size and viewpoint He would often clean his brush after each stroke when painting flesh so that the colour remained constantly variable He also started to paint standing up which continued until old age when he switched to a high chair 15 The colours of non flesh areas in these paintings are typically muted while the flesh becomes increasingly highly and variably coloured By about 1960 Freud had established the style that he would use with some changes for the rest of his career The later portraits often use an over life size scale but are of mostly relatively small heads or in half lengths Later portraits are often much larger In his late career he often followed a portrait by producing an etching of the subject in a different pose drawing directly onto the plate with the sitter in his view 16 Freud s portraits often depict only the sitter sometimes sprawled naked on the floor or on a bed or alternatively juxtaposed with something else as in Girl With a White Dog 1951 52 and Naked Man With Rat 1977 78 17 According to Edward Chaney The distinctive recumbent manner in which Freud poses so many of his sitters suggests the conscious or unconscious influence both of his grandfather s psychoanalytical couch and of the Egyptian mummy his dreaming figures clothed or nude staring into space until if ever brought back to health and or consciousness The particular application of this supine pose to freaks friends wives mistresses dogs daughters and mother alike the latter regularly depicted after her suicide attempt and eventually literally mummy like in death tends to support this hypothesis 18 The use of animals in his compositions is widespread and often he features a pet and its owner Other examples of portraits with both animals and people in Freud s work include Guy and Speck 1980 81 Eli and David 2005 06 and Double Portrait 1985 86 19 He had a special passion for horses having enjoyed riding at school in Dartington where he sometimes slept in the stables 20 His portraits solely of horses include Grey Gelding 2003 Skewbald Mare 2004 and Mare Eating Hay 2006 Wilting houseplants feature prominently in some portraits especially in the 1960s and Freud also produced a number of paintings purely of plants 21 Other regular features included mattresses in earlier works and huge piles of the linen rags with which he used to clean his brushes in later ones 22 Some portraits especially in the 1980s have very carefully painted views of London roofscapes seen through the studio windows 23 Freud s subjects who needed to make a very large and uncertain commitment of their time were often the people in his life friends family fellow painters lovers children He said The subject matter is autobiographical it s all to do with hope and memory and sensuality and involvement really 24 However the titles were mostly anonymous and the identity of the sitter not always disclosed the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire had a portrait of one of Freud s daughters as a baby for several years before he mentioned who the model was In the 1970s Freud spent 4 000 hours on a series of paintings of his mother about which art historian Lawrence Gowing observed it is more than 300 years since a painter showed as directly and as visually his relationship with his mother And that was Rembrandt 25 Freud painted from life and usually spent a great deal of time with each subject demanding the model s presence even while working on the background of the portrait Ria Naked Portrait 2007 a nude completed in 2007 required sixteen months of work with the model Ria Kirby posing all but four evenings during that time With each session averaging five hours the painting took approximately 2 400 hours to complete 26 A rapport with his models was necessary and while at work Freud was characterised as an outstanding raconteur and mimic 26 Regarding the difficulty in deciding when a painting is completed Freud said that he feels he s finished when he gets the impression he s working on somebody else s painting 26 Paintings were divided into day paintings done in natural light and night paintings done under artificial light and the sessions and lighting were never mixed 27 It was Freud s practice to begin a painting by first drawing in charcoal on the canvas He then applied paint to a small area of the canvas and gradually worked outward from that point For a new sitter he often started with the head as a means of getting to know the person then painted the rest of the figure eventually returning to the head as his comprehension of the model deepened 26 A section of canvas was intentionally left bare until the painting was finished 26 The finished painting is an accumulation of richly worked layers of pigment as well as months of intense observation 26 Later career Edit Benefits Supervisor Sleeping 1995 a very large portrait of Big Sue Tilley showing his handling of flesh tones and a typical high viewpoint Freud painted fellow artists including Frank Auerbach and Francis Bacon and produced a large number of portraits of the performance artist Leigh Bowery He also painted Henrietta Moraes a muse to many Soho artists A series of huge nude portraits from the mid 1990s depicted Sue Tilley or Big Sue some using her job title of Benefits Supervisor in the title of the painting 28 as in his 1995 portrait Benefits Supervisor Sleeping which in May 2008 was sold by Christie s in New York for 33 6 million setting a world record auction price for a living artist 29 30 Freud s most consistent model in his later years was his studio assistant and friend David Dawson the subject of his final unfinished work 31 Towards the end of his life he did a nude portrait of model Kate Moss Freud was one of the best known British artists working in a representational style and was shortlisted for the Turner Prize in 1989 32 33 After Cezanne 1999 2000 National Gallery of Australia His painting After Cezanne noteworthy because of its unusual shape was purchased by the National Gallery of Australia for 7 4 million The top left section of this painting has been grafted on to the main section below and closer inspection reveals a horizontal line where these two sections were joined 34 In 1996 the Abbot Hall Art Gallery in Kendal mounted a major exhibition of 27 paintings and thirteen etchings covering Freud s output to date The following year the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art presented Lucian Freud Early Works The exhibition comprised around 30 drawings and paintings done between 1940 and 1945 35 In 1997 Freud received the Rubens Prize of the city of Siegen 36 From September 2000 to March 2001 the Museum fur Moderne Kunst Frankfurt was able to show 50 paintings drawings and etchings from the late 1940s to 2000 in a larger overview exhibition despite the artist s considerable resentment towards Germany 37 All print media bore the motif of Freud s outstanding painting Sleeping by the Lion Carpet 1995 1996 depicting the nude Sue Tilley 38 In addition to some of his most important nude portraits of women the large format picture Nude with leg up Leigh Bowery from 1992 was also shown in Frankfurt which was removed in the Metropolitan Museum New York from the exhibition in 1993 39 The Frankfurt exhibition was realised in a personal dialogue between curator Rolf Lauter and Lucian Freud and is thus the only project Freud authorised in direct cooperation with a German museum 40 The major retrospective at London s Hayward Gallery in 1988 was the focal point for the BBC Omnibus programme which saw one of the very few conversations with Freud ever recorded in this case with Omnibus director Jake Auerbach 41 The conversations with the artist were made possible by Duncan MacGuigan from Acquavella Galleries New York This was followed by a large retrospective at Tate Britain in 2002 In 2001 Freud completed a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II There was criticism of the portrayal in some sections of the British media 42 In 2005 a retrospective of Freud s work was held at the Museo Correr in Venice scheduled to coincide with the Biennale In late 2007 a collection of etchings went on display at the Museum of Modern Art 43 Grave of Lucian Freud at Highgate Cemetery Freud died in London on 20 July 2011 and is buried in Highgate Cemetery Archbishop Rowan Williams officiated at the private funeral 44 Art market EditIn 2008 Benefits Supervisor Sleeping 1995 a portrait of civil servant Sue Tilley sold for 33 6 million the highest price ever at the time for a work by a living artist At a Christie s New York auction in 2015 Benefits Supervisor Resting sold for 56 2 million 45 46 On 13 October 2011 his 1952 Boy s Head a small portrait of Charlie Lumley his neighbour reached 4 998 088 at Sotheby s London contemporary art evening auction making it one of the highlights of the 2011 auction autumn season 47 On 10 November 2015 Freud s 2004 painting The Brigadier a portrait of Andrew Parker Bowles in his British Royal Army uniform sold for 34 89 million US at Christie s in New York City beating the 30 million US presale estimate for the work 48 Personal life EditIn the 1940s Freud and fellow artists Adrian Ryan and John Minton were in a homosexual love triangle 49 After an affair with Lorna Garman he went on to marry in 1948 her niece Kitty Garman daughter of sculptor Jacob Epstein and socialite Kathleen Garman They had two daughters Annabel Freud and the poet Annie Freud before their marriage ended in 1952 50 Kitty Freud later known as Kitty Godley after her marriage in 1955 to economist Wynne Godley died in 2011 51 In late 1952 Freud eloped with Guinness heiress and writer Lady Caroline Blackwood to Paris where they married in 1953 they divorced in 1959 50 Freud is rumoured to have fathered as many as forty children 52 although this number is generally accepted as an exaggeration Fourteen children have been identified two from Freud s first marriage and 12 by various mistresses 53 Writer Esther Freud and fashion designer Bella Freud are his daughters by Bernadine Coverley Selected solo exhibitions Edit1994 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 2000 Museum fur Moderne Kunst Frankfurt 2003 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles 2004 Scottish National Gallery Edinburgh 2005 Museo Correr Venice 2006 Acquavella Galleries New York 2007 Irish Museum of Modern Art Dublin 2008 Museum of Modern Art New York 2008 Gemeentemuseum Den Haag The Hague 2010 Centre Georges Pompidou Paris 2012 National Portrait Gallery London 2012 The Modern Fort Worth 2013 Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien 2016 2021 Irish Museum of Modern Art Dublin 2019 Royal Academy of Arts 2022 National Gallery LondonReferences Edit Lucian Freud OM The Daily Telegraph London 21 July 2011 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 8 March 2020 Freud was appointed a Companion of Honour in 1983 and a member of the Order of Merit in 1993 Lucian Freud 1922 2011 Tate Retrieved October 2016 Smith Roberta 14 December 2007 Lucian Freud Stripped Bare The New York Times Retrieved 22 July 2011 a b Spurling John 13 December 1998 Portrait of the artist as a happy man The Independent Retrieved 19 June 2010 No 34708 The London Gazette 13 October 1939 p 6866 London Exhibition Showcases the Best of Bryanston Art and Design Bryanston Art Past and Present Bryanston School 12 October 2008 Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 25 July 2011 Lucian Freud P 40 Painted Life Bryanston Bryanston School 8 February 2012 Archived from the original on 13 November 2012 Retrieved 20 February 2012 Obituary Lucian Freud OM The Daily Telegraph London 21 July 2011 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 20 February 2012 From late 1946 to early 1947 he and Freud painted on Poros John Craxton Guardian Obituary He had met Freud by 1949 the acquaintance was well developed by 1950 when we shared the ground floor of a house in Hatch Street together Lucian who was staying in Ireland used to come around in the mornings to paint so that sometimes when I would surface around ten or eleven I would find them both at work in the studio next door Anthony Cronin Patrick Swift 1927 83 IMMA Retrospective Catalogue 1993 Freud came to Dublin in 1948 In September 1951 Kitty Garman wrote to her mother She mentions Freud working on a painting in Paddy Swift s Hatch Street studio Dead Cock s Head 1951 Freud Prophet of Discomfort Archived 19 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine Mic Moroney Irish Arts Review 2007 Art term The School of London tate org 10 April 2017 Retrieved 16 July 2019 Kitaj s essay in the catalogue for The Human Clay exhibition Hayward Gallery London 1976 a b Tate Man with a Thistle Tate Girl with a Kitten a b NPG II NPG Etchings Naked Man With Rat Retrieved 9 February 2019 Edward Chaney Freudian Egypt The London Magazine April May 2006 pp 62 69 complete refs in Chaney Edward 2006 Egypt in England and America The Cultural Memorials of Religion Royalty and Religion Sites of Exchange European Crossroads and Faultlines eds M Ascari and A Corrado Amsterdam and New York Rodopi pp 39 69 UBS Art Collection A Z Archived from the original on 26 August 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2016 Gayford Martin Freud s Animals Archived 11 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine Apollo 2006 11 01 Retrieved 2009 06 05 Tate Two Plants 1977 80 NPG VII Tate Standing by the Rags 1988 9 NPG IV amp 25 Lucian Freud Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine British Council 2009 Retrieved 18 December 2010 Jones Jerene 24 April 1978 Is Lucian Freud s Relationship with Mother Odd or Is It Art People Retrieved 22 July 2011 a b c d e f Gayford Martin 22 September 2007 Gayford Martin Lucian Freud marathon man The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 22 July 2011 NPG V NPG 33 Etching Tate Freud work sets new world record BBC News 14 May 2008 Retrieved 14 May 2008 Lucian Freud From Ingres of Existentialism to Impasto Master BLOUINARTINFO COM Mark Brown Lucian Freud s final work to be shown in 2012 National Portrait Gallery show The Guardian 20 September 2011 Retrieved 29 January 2012 Tate Turner Prize 1989 Exhibition at Tate Britain Tate Retrieved 19 November 2016 Turner Prize 1985 artists Terry Atkinson Tate Retrieved 19 November 2016 Lampert Catherine Lauter Rolf 2001 Lucian Freud After Cezanne National Gallery of Australia Canberra 2001 Australia National Gallery of Australia p 24 ISBN 0642541477 Richard Calvocoressi Lucian Freud Early Works Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art 1997 ISBN 0 903598 66 3 Lauter Rolf Lucian Freud in 10x Malerei Rubenspreis der Stadt Siegen in Werken der Sammlung Lambrecht Schadeberg Siegen 2002 ISBN 3 935874 03 0 The negative attitude towards Germany came on the one hand due to the National Socialists forced flight of the family from their beloved Berlin to London and on the other hand due to the theft of his portrait of Francis Bacon which was stolen from the traveling exhibition in the Neue Nationalgalerie Berlin in 1988 Lauter Rolf 2001 Lucian Freud naked portraits collections britishart yale edu Retrieved 4 February 2020 Lauter Rolf ed Lucian Freud Naked Portraits Werke der 40er bis 90er Jahre Lucian Freud Naked Portraits Works from the 1940s to the 1990s Museum fur Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main 29 09 2000 04 03 2001 ISBN 9783775790437 In 1987 the British Council organised a retrospective for the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington DC which was subsequently shown in the Musee National d Art Moderne in Paris in the Hayward Gallery London and in the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin Omnibus Lucian Freud Freud royal portrait divides critics BBC News 21 December 2001 Retrieved 26 February 2008 Ayers Robert 18 December 2007 Curator s Voice Starr Figura on Lucian Freud s Etchings BLOUINARTINFO Retrieved 23 April 2008 Feaver William January 2015 Freud Lucian Michael 1922 2011 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 103935 Subscription or UK public library membership required Lucian Freud 1922 2011 Benefits Supervisor Resting christies com Retrieved 9 February 2019 Katya Kazakina 14 May 2015 Freud s Lounging Naked Civil Servant Sells for 56 2 Million Bloomberg Business Sotheby s October 2011 Evening Sales of 20th Century Italian Art and Contemporary Art Total 39 5 62 45 Million Sotheby s Press Release Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Lucian Freud portrait of Camilla s ex husband sells for nearly 35m The Guardian 11 November 2015 Brown Mark 10 July 2021 Exhibition brings to light young Freud s love triangle The Guardian London p 25 a b Face to face with Freud The Sunday Times 22 May 2005 David Kamp Freud Interrupted Vanity Fair February 2012 page 148 Freud the Lothario Simon Edge Daily Express 16 May 2008 David Kamp Freud Interrupted Vanity Fair February 2012 page 147 Further reading EditExternal video Lucian Freud Standing by the Rags 1988 89 SmarthistoryCalvocoressi Richard 1997 Early Works Lucian Freud Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art ISBN 0 903598 66 3 Lauter Rolf 2000 Lucian Freud Naked Portraits Works from the 1940s to the 1990s Museum fur Moderne Kunst Frankfurt am Main 29 09 2000 04 03 2001 ISBN 3 7757 9043 8 ISBN 9783775790437 Feaver William 1996 Lucian Freud Paintings and Etchings Abbot Hall Art Gallery ISBN 0 9503335 7 3 Feaver William 2002 Lucian Freud Tate ISBN 0 8109 6267 5 Feaver William Freud Lucian Michael 1922 2011 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 103935 Subscription or UK public library membership required Gayford Martin 2010 Man with a Blue Scarf On Sitting for a Portrait by Lucian Freud Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 500 23875 2 Gowing Lawrence 1982 Lucian Freud Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 09154 4 Gruen John 1991 The Artist Observed 28 Interviews with Contemporary Artists a cappella books ISBN 1 55652 103 0 Hughes Robert 1997 Lucian Freud revised edition Thames amp Hudson ISBN 0 500 27535 1 Sharp Jasper 2013 Lucian Freud Exhibition Catalogue of the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Prestel ISBN 978 3 7913 5332 6 NPG National Portrait Gallery Exhibition booklet for Lucian Freud Portraits 2012External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Lucian Freud 50 artworks by or after Lucian Freud at the Art UK site Lucian Freud exhibition English Press release exhibition booklet Kunsthistorisches Museum Wien Vienna 2014 2002 exhibition at Tate Britain including a room guide Freud at Tate Britain Essay by Kelly Grovier on Lucian Freud in The Observer 2006 Charles Finch on Lucian Freud MoMA Museum of Modern Art New York City in French Lucian Freud Centre Pompidou Paris Lucian Freud L Atelier The Studio Centre Pompidou Paris Video 2010 Smee Sebastian 31 July 2011 Lucian Freud up close The Boston Globe Channel Four News Interview with Lucian Freud on the campaign to keep Titian paintings in Britain 2008 Lucian Freud from another perspective A major exhibition coming to Madrid 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lucian Freud amp oldid 1141435175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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