Authors
FRANCIS GIACOBETTIDimensions
300 x 380 x 80mm
From late 1991 to early 1992, shortly before his death, Irish-British painter Francis Bacon participated in rare interviews and sittings with French photographer Francis Giacobetti. Giacobetti captured eerie images inspired by Bacon's unsettling works. These photos, along with previously unreleased Bacon paintings, were exhibited in June 2003 at Marlborough Gallery in London. This volume presents the photographs and excerpts from their conversations, offering an intimate portrait of the disconcerting artist. One of the most successful painters of the twentieth century, the self-taught Irish-British painter Francis Bacon produced canvases with distorted biomorphic forms expressing the brutality, terror and disconnection of the postwar psyche. His distinctive style made him one of the most widely recognized figurative artists of the 1940s and '50s. Through his portraiture, Bacon depicted his bohemian friends and denizens of the nightlife in the Soho district of London. His famously cluttered studio was carefully catalogued and meticulously re-created in the Hugh Lane Gallery in Dublin in 2001. AUTHOR: Another self-taught artist, Francis Giacobetti is recognized today for bringing a touch of elegance to the realm of nude photography. He has photographed for the monthly magazine Lui since its creation, he shot the Pirelli calendars for 1970 and 1971, and he has created portraits of the world's most famous artists, celebrities and personalities. Giacobetti's acclaimed series, including Zebras, Iris, Hymn and the Bacon portraits, express all the beauty of the human body, and his unorthodox approach to technique, light and shadow has earned him a place in the pantheon of great photographers. 200 illustrations Hardcover in a luxury slipcase