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The extraordinarily revealing interviews with Francis Bacon
conducted over a period of 25 years by the distinguished art critic
David Sylvester amount to a unique statement by Bacon on his art
and on art in general. In the book, a classic of its kind, Bacon
considers the problems of realism and sheds new light on aspects of
his life. With a rare and brilliant use of language, Bacon talks
about his aims as a painter and ways in which he works, responding
always with vivacity and candour to Sylvester's searching
questions. Bacon's obsessive effort to record and re-create the
human form, his practice of making variation on old masters'
painting and on photographs, his dependence on chance, and his
views about the way in which his work has been interpreted are only
some of the many subjects discussed and investigated in depth
during these historic encounters.
A unique portrait of one of the creative geniuses of the 20th
century, by the distinguished critic David Sylvester. Controversial
in both life and art, Francis Bacon was one of the most important
painters of the 20th century. His monumental, unsettling images
have an extraordinary power to disturb, shock and haunt the
spectator, 'to unlock the valves of feeling and therefore return
the onlooker to life more violently'. Drawing on his personal
knowledge of Bacon's inspirations, intentions and working methods,
David Sylvester surveys the development of the work from 1933 to
the early 1990s, and discusses critically a number of its crucial
aspects. He also reproduces previously unpublished extracts from
his celebrated conversations with Bacon in which the artist speaks
about himself, modern painters and the art of the past. Finally,
Sylvester gives a brief account of Bacon's life, correcting certain
errors that elsewhere have been presented as facts. Divided into
the sections 'Review', 'Reflections', 'Fragments of Talk' and
'Biographical Note', Looking Back at Francis Bacon is a unique
portrait of one of the creative geniuses of our age by a writer of
comparable distinction.
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