Francis Bacon - Evening & Day Editions London Wednesday, January 18, 2017 | Phillips
  • Literature

    Bruno Sabatier 10
    Alexandre Tacou 2

  • Artist Biography

    Francis Bacon

    Irish-British • 1909 - 1992

    Francis Bacon was a larger-than-life figure during his lifetime and remains one now more than ever. Famous for keeping a messy studio, and even more so for his controversial, celebrated depictions of papal subjects and bullfights, often told in triptychs, Bacon signified the blinding dawn of the Modern era. His signature blurred portraits weren't murky enough to stave off his reputation as highly contentious—his paintings were provocations against social order in the people's eye. But, Bacon often said, "You can't be more horrific than life itself."
     
    In conversation with yet challenging the conventions of Modern art, Bacon was known for his triptychs brutalizing formalist truths, particularly Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion, which Bacon debuted in London in 1944, and Three Studies of Lucian Freud, which became famous when it set the record for most expensive work of art at auction at the time it sold in 2013.

    View More Works

19

Étude pour une corrida (after Study for a Bullfight No. 1, 1969)

1971
Lithograph in colours, on Arches paper, with full margins.
I. 127 x 115 cm (50 x 45 1/4 in.)
S. 159.8 x 120 cm (62 7/8 x 47 1/4 in.)

Signed in black felt-tip pen and numbered 35/150 in pencil (there were no known artist's proofs), published by the musée du Grand Palais, Paris, for the retrospective of 1971, framed.

Estimate
£40,000 - 60,000 

Sold for £50,000

Contact Specialist
Robert Kennan
Head of Sale
London
+44 207 318 4075

General Enquiries
+44 20 7318 4069

Evening & Day Editions

London Auction 19 January 2017