14 February 2023

modern British artists: "Friends & Relations" exhibition

                                 
The four painters socialising in Soho (plus a young friend on left)
photo by John Deakin, 1963

One of Britain’s noted post-war painters, Frank Auerbach was born in Berlin in 1931. Arriving as a Jewish refugee in 1939, he attended St Martin’s School of Art, London, and studied with David Bomberg in night classes at Borough Poly­technic. He then stud­ied at the Royal College of Art and remained in London ever sin­ce. His first exhibition was held at Lon­don’s Beaux Arts Gallery in 1956; since then his works have been collected widely.

Auerbach is the last surviving artist being celebrated in the Gagosian Gallery London exhibition called Friends and Relations: Lucian Freud, Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach and Michael Andrews. The exhibit­ion, which closed in Jan 2023, clarified the links betw­een their resp­ec­tive practices, and featured some artists’ portraits of each other.

Note the photo that John Deakin above captured of the four painters in Soho in 1963, along with much younger painter Timothy Behrens: From L-R they were Behrens, Lucian Freud (1922-2011), Francis Bacon (1909–1992), Frank Auerbach (1931-) and Michael Andrews (1928–1995).

Curated by art historian Richard Calvocoressi, Friends and Relat­ions con­textualised key works by 4 significant artists. Featuring 40+ paint­ings from private and public collections, it posit­ioned Freud as the grouping’s central figure. Each painter was aware of the others’ pract­ices, sometimes as coll­eag­ues and sometimes as competitors. But of the four, Freud alone collected his friends’ work, especially buying works by Bacon. At his death, Freud also owned 16 by Auerbach and a small oil by Andrews. The exhibition included two portraits by Auerbach formerly in Freud’s collection, on loan from British museums.

Bella and Esther
by Lucian Freud, 1988
TLS

Portraiture was at the heart of Freud’s, Bacon’s, Auerbach’s and to some extent Andrews’ practices. The exhibition’s title echoed not only the four artists’ interrelationships, but also the intimate relation­ships between artist and sitters, lovers and spouses. Girl in a Dark Jacket (1947) exemplified Freud’s crisp, early style and depicted Kitty Garman, his first wife and the daughter of sculptor Jacob Epstein. Nak­ed Portrait on a Red Sofa (1989–91), praised by his friend photograph­er Bruce Bernard as one of Freud’s most audacious and sensitive works, showed the reclining figure of the artist’s daughter, Bella. The Paint­er’s Mother Resting III (1977) was part of a series of port­raits of the artist’s mother, Lucie Freud, which he began when father Ernst Freud died.

The intense friendship between Freud and Bacon was commemorated in the latt­er’s Three Studies for Portraits: Isabel Rawsthorne, Lucian Freud and John Hewitt (1966), in which Freud’s head was paired with those of Hew­itt, an antiquities dealer, and Raw­s­thorne, a fellow artist and friend. Another highlight was Portrait of a Man Walking Down Steps (1972), a tribute by Bacon to his lover George Dyer, who’d suicided just before the artist’s 1971 retrospective opened at Paris’ Grand Palais.

3 studies for a portrait of Henrietta Moraes
by Bacon, 1963

A selection of Auerbach’s work included E .O.W., S.A.W. and J.J.W. in the Garden I (1963), a full-length portrait of his lover and frequent model, Stella West, and her family outdoors. Also included was Head of Gerda Boehm (1964), which depicted Auerbach’s much older cousin, who also fled Nazi Germany. On loan from the University of East Ang­lia, the work’s dense application of paint epitomised Auerbach’s ap­proach then. Else­where the exhibition reflected the deep relation­ship that both Auer­bach and Freud enjoyed with the cityscape of London. 

Andrews
Colony Room 1, 1962
Geocities

Andrews’ ambitious group portrait The Colony Room I (1962) was on loan from Pallant House Gallery Chichester. Set in a Soho drinking club, it pic­tured Andrews’s own mural at back, with the figures of Freud, Bacon, Bernard, artist’s model Henrietta Moraes and the club’s proprietor Muriel Belcher in front. Melanie and Me Swimming (1978–79), loaned by the Tate, depicted the artist teaching his daughter to swim in a Scottish river.

Also on view at Grosvenor Hill were photographs of the four artists by their friend, the noted writer and photographer Bruce Bernard (1928–2000). Complementing the paintings in Friends and Relations, Bernard’s portraits of the artists in their studios, some of which were exhib­ited publicly for the first time, were both direct and informal. The painter Virginia Verran, who represented Bernard’s est­ate, noted: “The link between painting and photography was a vital one throughout his life and the chance to bring his photographs together with paintings in this way is a profound one.”

 
Lucian Freud 
by Frank Auerbach, 1975–76, 
gagosian quarterly

The exhibition was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue includ­ing installation views of the show and featuring essays by Martin Gayford and Florence Hallett, and an interview with Frank Auerbach by Richard Calvocoressi. Well worth reading.





16 comments:

roentare said...

This is an introduction for me to learn about these four artists. The dynamics for four ladies in the painting is quite interesting. The red looking four paintings without a clear face seem a bit violent and bloody

Hels said...

roentare

it is a bit of a learning experience for me, too. I learned history and art history in a very traditional university, and knew heaps about medieval, renaissance and early modern art. Even now, I am very comfortable with Italian Renaissance art, 17th century Dutch art or late 19th century French Impressionism for example. So Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon etc are a challenge.

The essays and illustrations in the exhibition catalogue are very helpful.

LondonARTRoundup said...

Lucian Freud, Francis Bacon, Frank Auerbach and Michael Andrews are not the only notable artists that emerged from London’s swinging 60s, but these four were friends. A photo of them having dinner in Soho was the inspiration for the show, though I imagine curator Richard Calvocoressi must have felt like Bob Geldoff compiling the Band Aid lineup. The overall focus is figurative, and works are grouped thematically even if they were made years or decades apart. It’s fascinating to compare and contrast not just their styles but their overall approach.

LondonARTRoundup

Viagens pelo Rio de Janeiro e Brasil. said...

Boa tarde e uma ótima terça-feira. O Palácio do Planalto foi danificado e está sendo totalmente reformado. A democracia venceu e vencerá sempre.
Luiz Gomes.

Hels said...

LondonART

there is often a particular inspiration for an exhibition like this, and it makes perfect sense that the Soho dinner would be given a place of honour at the Gagosian Gallery. So for me the key questions were 1. did the four artists keep up their friendships? 2. did they influence each other artistically? and 3. did they collect works from each other? Thus we have to thank the curator and the one surviving artist.

Hels said...

Luiz

Thankfully, after the Planalto Palace was damaged, it is being completely renovated. I can't stand any intentional destruction, but it breaks my heart when cultural and historical icons are targeted. Oscar Niemeyer will be smiling down from heaven.

mem said...

Thanks Helen , This is interesting . I recently watched a "Fake or Fortune " episode in which an early Lucien Freud sketch was examined and it was so interesting as It talked about his early life and his education as an artist . I saw it on U tube so have a look if you can . I think you would enjoy it .

Hels said...

mem

Freud's surname was arguably the most famous name in the universe, so I wonder how that affected Lucien's life and his career. Did his family origins add to his artistic insights? Or did he struggle with impossible expectations about his talents? I will definitely watch that Fake or Fortune episode.. many thanks.

bazza said...

When you look at the surface of a Frank Auerbach painting it really looks like the paint has been "laid on with a trowel"; probably a pallet knife in fact. However, his work is absorbing as it is of the others in this group. To my mind Freud was the leading British artist and, since he died, I would say Hockney wears that crown.
CLICK HERE for Bazza’s frankly fickle Blog ‘To Discover Ice’

Hels said...

bazza

David Hockney could have been part of this group of British artists, with both strong professional and social connections. But as popular as Hockney was and is, he seemed to a] spend more time in the USA and b] did not share exhibitions with Freud, Bacon or Auerbach.

However I would have requested "Portrait of an Artist (Pool with Two Figures)", 1972 and "My Parents" 1977, if I had been curating the Friends and Relat­ions Exhibition.

DUTA said...

'Friends and relations' is always a fascinating subject, especially if the friends are influential artists and did portraits of each other, like the four in the top picture.
Auerbach's portrait of Lucien Freud is very powerful! The fact that this german-british painter, the only survivor of the group, still works at his advanced age - makesthe painting even more special.

Viagens pelo Rio de Janeiro e Brasil. said...

Boa tarde e uma ótima quinta-feira. Suas matérias são sempre interessantes e tenho oportunidade de aprender sempre.
Luiz Gomes.

Hels said...

DUTA

'Friends and relations' were critical, yes!! You reminded me to have another look at Auerbach's portraits of artist Leon Kossoff (1926–2019), the same age, profession and home location as the other British artists. Kossoff studied under David Bomberg from 1950-2, and was also influenced by another one of the students, Frank Auerbach. [bazza: note the heavy impasto in both Auerbach’s & Kossoff’s paintings]. In 1959, Kossoff began to teach at the Regent St Polytechnic, Chelsea and Saint Martin's Schools of Art in London. While teaching, he soon started featuring in galleries, along with his friend Frank Auerbach as well as Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Keith Critchlow.

Hels said...

Luiz

I know you could easily find modern British art on-line, especially portraits and landscapes. But I hope you can find some in galleries in your own city, especially Freud, Bacon, Auerbach, Andrews, Kossoff, Hockney etc etc.

My name is Erika. said...

There's so many painters I have never heard of, so it is always interesting to read about them and learn something new. I'm not sure I care for a couple of the pieces you shared, but they still show talent. Thanks for sharing Hels. hugs-Erika

Hels said...

Erika

I too knew almost nothing about modern art, all my lectures and conference papers ending after WW1, Bauhaus and Deco. So when Gagosian Gallery in London decided to put on the exhibition called Friends and Relations, it was time to do a LOT of reading.

Not caring for all the art pieces equally is quite right, because taste changes greatly between viewers and even within the one viewer over time. So look on line for all the paintings by, eg, Leon Kossoff and analyse why some are desirable and some annoy you.