28 February – 27 August 2018 – By Francesco Carelli , University of Milan

A landmark exhibition at Tate Britain celebrates how artists have captured the intense experience of life in paint.

All Too Human: Bacon, Freud and a Century of Painting Life showcases around 100 works by some of the most celebrated modern British artists, with Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon at its heart. It reveals how their art captures personal and immediate experiences and events, distilling raw sensations through their use of paint, as Freud said: ‘I want the paint to work as flesh does’. Bringing together major works by Walter Sickert, Stanley Spencer, Michael Andrews, Frank Auerbach, R.B. Kitaj, Leon Kossoff, Paula Rego, Jenny Saville, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye and many others, this exhibition makes poignant connections across generations of artists and tells an expanded story of figurative painting in the 20th century and into the 21st century.

 

Groups of major and rarely seen works by Lucian Freud and Francis Bacon give visitors a chance to immerse themselves in the rich sensuality and intimacy of these two modern masters. Key paintings spanning Freud’s career explore his studio as both context and subject of his work and show how his unflinchingly honest depictions of models became more sculptural and visceral over time.

 

In contrast to Freud’s practice of working from life, the exhibition looks at Bacon’s relationship with photographer John Deakin, whose portraits of friends and lovers were often the starting point for Bacon’s work.

 Earlier works by Bacon like Study after Velazquez 1950 are shown alongside a sculpture by Giacometti, both artists having explored the enduring presence of isolated figures.

Looking to earlier generations, the exhibition shows how this spirit in painting had been pursued by artists   like Walter Sickert and Chaïm Soutine – key precedents for portraying an intimate, subjective and tangible   reality. The teaching of William Coldstream at the Slade School of Fine Art and David Bomberg at the Borough

Polytechnic also proved hugely influential.

 

Employing Freud as a fellow tutor, Coldstream encouraged the likes  of Michael Andrews and Euan Uglow to fix the visible world on canvas through intense observation, while  Bomberg’s vision led students like Frank Auerbach, Leon Kossoff and Dorothy Mead to pursue a more tactile,embodied experience of life.

This  generation’s work encompassed a wide variety of subjects, from Auerbach’s

and Kossoff’s enduring fascination with London’s streets and public spaces to F.N. Souza’s spiritual and symbolic figures, and from Coldstream’s and Freud’s focus on the body in isolation to Michael Andrews’s and R.B. Kitaj’s interest in group scenes and storytelling.

The exhibition also sheds light on the role of women artists in the traditionally male-dominated field of  figurative painting. Paula Rego explores the condition of women in society and the roles they play over the course of their lives, while always referring to autobiographical events, as in The Family 1988. Her work underwent a particularly profound change in the late 1980s and 1990s when she returned to working from life.