Lucian Freud
Eu acho que é seguro dizer que Lucian Freud é o maior pintor vivo da figura humana . Mesmo as suas piores pinturas são melhores do que o melhor trabalho da maioria dos outros artistas. Se você não acha que Freud é o maior, acredito que achará a forma como ele trabalha fascinante. Recentemente, ele terminou de pintar Ria Kirby de 26 anos, curadora de arte antiga do Museu Victoria & Albert,. Levou 16 meses de pose para o artista, 7 noites por semana, durante 5 horas por noite, e a modelo só teve 4 noites de folga durante esse tempo todo. Foram mais de 2400 horas de sessão, ou, neste caso de pose.
Não é apenas uma carga horária para uma obra, mas com a idade de quase 85, o pintor mostra que ainda pode trabalhar.
O Telegraph, tem um relatório fascinante sobre todo o calvário. Ria Kirby disse: "Para começar, era muito cansativo, porque eu tinha apenas cerca de 10 minutos entre o término do meu trabalho e começar a pose. Passei por todas as emoções possíveis na minha vida. No início não estava muito consciente de tentar ser um bom modelo. Custou-me um pouco a sentir à vontade, e totalmente segura, ao mesmo tempo. Eu sabia que tinha de voltar para a mesma posição depois de uma pausa. Depois de um mês ou assim, tornou-se mais fácil e sentia-me completamente natural. Percebi que não há sentido em tentar ser qualquer coisa. Você apenas tem que estar lá e ser você mesmo. Mas no final eu senti uma liberdade muito grande. Foi um lugar onde eu pude estar onde não tinha alguém a telefonar-me ou a incomodar-me. Tudo o que eu tinha a fazer era ficar deitada, e eu sou muito boa nisso. " Telégraph
A pintura final da Ria Kirby, chamada de "Ria, Naked Portrait 2007" estará em exposição na Tate Modern, em Londres a partir do 05 de Outubro.
Lucian Freud é hoje o artista vivo mais caro em leilão com a sua pintura Big Sue.
(Lucien Freud faleceu em 20-07-2011)
From February 9th to May 27th the National Portrait Gallery will be exhibiting over 100 portraits by Lucian Freud. The celebrated British figurative painter, who died in July 2011, used Winsor & Newton Artists' Oil Colour extensively during his long career and the used tubes can be seen amongst the detritus in photographs and paintings of his studio.Freud worked exclusively from life, usually using a nude model posed on his studio’s threadbare furnishings or against piles of painter’s rags. He would start with a rough charcoal sketch on the canvas, and then lay in the paint, working from the head outwards. Occasionally he would extend the canvas by gluing on extra strips to accommodate the composition.
At the start of his career Freud built a reputation for drawing but soon moved on to painting with, initially, mixed results. An early painting, ‘Landscape with Birds’ (1940), was made using enamel paints because he had heard Picasso used the same material. Freud’s painting curdled but it prompted him to remark, ‘learning to paint is literally learning to use paint.’
Moving on to oils, Freud, as a young painter, would sit at the easel and paint, wet on wet, using small sable brushes, creating what the critic John Berger called, ‘a painstaking naturalism.’ This changed in the early 1950s when Freud was invited to spend the weekend with the painter Graham Sutherland and his family. He met a fellow guest by arrangement at Victoria Station and Freud and Francis Bacon remained close friends until the late 1970’s.
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| Benefits Supervisor
Sleeping (1995) Oil on canvas, 151.3
x 219 cm |
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| Frank Auerbach
(1976) Oil on canvas, 26.5 x 40 cm |
Born in Berlin in 1922, Freud’s father, Ernst, was an architect and his grandfather was the founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud. In 1933 the Freuds left Berlin for London. They arrived not as refugees but with all their possessions, as émigrés. Lively and spirited, Freud’s first school was Dartington Hall where classes were not compulsory. He was soon moved to Bryanston where he joined the Oil painting club. Accounts of his expulsion from Bryanston differ. He is rumoured to have run a pack of hunting hounds through the school during matins, but art critic and Freud’s friend William Feaver believes it was for dropping his trousers on a Bournemouth street!
After a brief stint at Central School of Art, too dull and academic for Freud’s taste, he enrolled at the East Anglian school of Drawing and Painting, founded by the painter Cedric Morris. By now Freud had a reputation as a precocious and charismatic talent; he had his first one man show at the Lefevre gallery, London in 1944.
Freud began teaching at the Slade and married Kitty Garman, daughter of the sculptor Jacob Epstein. He took a studio on the rough side of Paddington and began to cultivate both the top and the bottom of London society. He would eat in a working man’s café, spend the afternoon in a bookmaker’s, then spend the night drinking with the Duke of Devonshire and Princess Margaret’s set. The journalist and famous Soho drinker, Jeffrey Bernard, admired Freud’s ability to straddle both worlds: ‘He has cracked the nut of how to conduct a double life.’ In 1952 Freud divorced Garman and married Caroline Blackwood, daughter of the Dowager marchioness of Dufferin, who strongly disapproved of the match. They were divorced in 1957. Critics, including David Sylvester, began to wonder if it was Freud’s turbulent private life that prompted him to paint women with the forensic harshness of his new style.
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| Standing by the Rags
(1988-89) Oil on canvas, 66.5 x 54.5 cm |
Freud’s paintings were not like people, but of people.
Freud was apparently cautious of using models with exotic physiques. However one of his most famous models was the Australian performance artiste Leigh Bowery, someone who fascinated him as much for his mind and outlook on life as for his gigantic frame, and was the subject of a number of works. Later, Freud was to paint ‘Big’ Sue Tilley, an official at the DHSS. In 2008, ‘Benefits Supervisor Sleeping,’ (1995) was to sell for $33.6 million, a record for a living artist. These paintings and many others including his last, unfinished painting of his assistant and friend David Dawson, will be on show at the National Portrait Gallery.
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**Lucian Freud, ‘Thoughts on Painting’. Encounter, July 1954
Bibliography:
William Feaver Lucian Freud. Exh. cat. London, Tate Britain, 2002




