Study for Crouching Nude (1952)

Bacon, Francis (1909-1992)

Study for Crouching Nude
1952
Oil and sand on canvas, 198.1 × 137.2 cm
Detroit Institute of ArtsDetroit

Few painters have defined the post–World War II era with its existential loathing better than Francis Bacon, the brilliant son of an Irish horse trainer. His breakthrough came with a 1945 triptych, ostensibly a Crucifixion but more properly described as ghouls gathered around a spectacle of human degradation.

Bars and railings, as in Study for Nude, separate the incarcerated subject from the curious spectator. His scenes appear airless and contained within imaginary glass walls. The artist’s asthmatic condition may have contributed to the aura of suffocation that weighs down these voyeuristic nightmares. The sources for Bacon‘s pictures are surprisingly diverse. He borrowed from Eisenstein’s movie stills, Velázquez‘s court scenes, and Joyce‘s meandering writings, as well as from medical textbooks, the tabloids, and Muybridge’s photographic experiments in motion. (DIA)