The Painter's Etchings. This exhibition presents the full scope of Freud's achievements in etching, including some seventy-five examples ranging from rare, early experiments in the 1940s to the increasingly large and complex compositions created since his rediscovery of the medium in the early 1980s. In an unusual cross-media installation, it also includes a selection of related paintings and drawings.
Lucian
Freud: The Painter’s Etchings, on view at The Museum of Modern Art in New
York from December 16, 2007, to March 10, 2008, highlights the artist’s
exceptional achievements in the medium of etching and explores the crucial
relationship between these works on paper and his works on canvas. In a
career spanning more than six decades, Freud (British, b. Germany, 1922),
has redefined portraiture and the nude through his frank scrutiny of the
human form. Although best known as a painter, Freud has made etching a
constant part of his artistic practice since 1982. The full scope and
significance of Freud’s achievements in etching are represented here,
ranging from rare, early experiments of the 1940s to the increasingly large
and complex compositions created since his rediscovery of the medium in the
early 1980s, including a new work completed in 2007.
Lucian Freud: The
Painter’s Etchings, Freud’s first solo exhibition at The Museum of Modern
Art and his first museum exhibition in New York City in 14 years, is
organized by Starr Figura, The Phyllis Ann and Walter Borten Assistant
Curator of Prints and Illustrated Books, The Museum of Modern Art.Ms.
Figura states: “Although Freud’s etchings speak for themselves in terms of
their quality and strength, this aspect of his work remains relatively
little known as compared with his paintings. This exhibition reveals the
integral and vitally important place of etchings within Freud’s oeuvre.” In
an unusual cross-media installation, some 68 etchings of the 82 that Freud
has created to date are juxtaposed with 21 related paintings and five
drawings, revealing the dramatic dialogue among mediums in Freud’s oeuvre.
Also included are three large copper plates from which three of Freud’s
most extraordinary etchings were printed. The exhibition is organized
around the themes that are central to Freud’s oeuvre, including, most
prominently, the works that he calls “Naked Portraits” and “Portrait
Heads,” as well as other subjects that he occasionally turns to, such as
dogs and views of the garden behind his house. Within each gallery,
etchings, paintings, and drawings are paired or grouped to underscore
Freud’s long-term fascination with particular subjects or sitters, to
highlight his intense preoccupation with the physical properties of his
different mediums, and to suggest how the mediums of painting and etching
nourish and inform one another in Freud’s practice.
Among the individual
sitters who appear in more than one work within the exhibition are Freud’s
mother Lucie, his daughter Bella, performance artist Leigh Bowery, and the
British lawyer and political advisor, Arnold Goodman. A grandson of the
psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, the artist was born in Berlin in 1922. He
emigrated with his family to London in 1933 to escape the Nazi takeover of
Germany, and became a British citizen in 1939. His formal training was
brief but included an important period in 1939 when he studied at painter
Cedric Morris's East Anglian School of Painting and Drawing in Dedham.
Freud began to work full-time as an artist in 1942 and had his first solo
exhibition in 1944 at London’s Lefevre Gallery.Freud often describes his
work as autobiographical, stating in 1974: “It is about myself and my
surroundings. It is an attempt at a record. I work from the people that
interest me and that I care about, in rooms that I live in and know.
I use
the people to invent my pictures with, and I can work more freely when they
are there.” Often awkward and anything but idealized, his works reflect
his belief that art should be based on observable reality—and for Freud
reality is disturbing. His etchings and paintings depict the people in his
life, mostly family members and friends who, once they’ve agreed to
participate, come for several hours on a regular, sometimes near-daily
basis to sit for him. Freud is known as a very slow worker. Each painting
takes from several months to more than a year to complete, and each etching
also typically occupies months of the artist’s time. The finished works
bear the evidence of progressive revision and reinforcement.
Freud and
Etching
Freud’s etchings are often directly related to specific paintings and are
sometimes part of an extended series of works dealing with a particular
subject. He makes them not by consulting his paintings, but by undertaking
a separate round of sittings in the studio; each new encounter provides its
own fresh revelations. Painting and printmaking offer him alternative
means of acquainting himself with a subject—one gestural and colorful, the
other linear and black and white—and, in fact, etchings have largely taken
the place of drawings in Freud’s oeuvre. Contrary to possible assumptions,
Freud’s etchings sometimes precede rather than follow the execution of
related paintings. When etching, Freud always works directly from his
models and uses variously bunched, feathered, and hatched lines to bring
their individual features into relief. Pared down to linear essentials and
depicting figures cropped or isolated against empty backgrounds, Freud's
etchings achieve a startling sense of psychological tension and formal
abstraction.
Freud typically has several projects going on at any one time: at least two
or three paintings and usually at least one etching. Not a typical
printmaker, he treats the etching plate like a canvas, standing the copper
plate upright on an easel and working slowly over the course of several
weeks or months to complete his image. Unlike most other artists who have
made as many prints as he, Freud does not work in any print technique other
than etching, nor has he ever incorporated color into his etching. He
works on prepared copperplates in his own studio, delivering them to a
trusted printer for proofing only after the image is complete. For him
etching is an intimate, autographic medium, comparable to drawing but with
what he has called an “element of danger and mystery. You don’t know how
it’s going to come out. What’s black is white. What’s left is right.”
Freud made his first six etchings between 1946 and 1948, all of which are
on view in the first gallery of the exhibition. In the 1940s, Freud’s work
was based on a miniaturist technique, in which forms and textures were
replicated through precise lines and smooth edges. Etching, with its
potential for minute linear details, was naturally suited to this style.
After 1948, Freud stopped making prints for 34 years and focused
exclusively on painting. His rediscovery of the medium in 1982 was
prompted by the publication that year of a major monograph about him and
his work by the renowned British art historian Lawrence Gowing. To satisfy
the desire for a new etching to be inserted into each of the 100 copies of
the deluxe edition of the book, Freud created 15 prints then chose four to
be published in editions of 25 each. The subjects of all 15 etchings—13 of
which are included in the exhibition—are people who frequented Freud’s
studio at the time, including Gowing; the artist’s mother, Lucie Freud; and
his daughter, Bella Freud. Freud’s etchings from 1982—and ever since—are
still based on a slow and intense process of observation and scrutiny, but
their fluid style reflects the more painterly and gestural approach that
Freud had by then developed in his works on canvas.
Naked Portraits
Freud’s “Naked Portraits” of men and women are his most disturbing and
subversive works. His figures are shown reclining on a bed or sofa, often
either asleep or in a state of introspection or reverie, in strange or
unflattering poses that nevertheless may be natural to the way they sleep
or relax. Commonly rendered from an unusual vantage point, the angular
limbs, foreshortened faces, and tortured body language rebuke the tradition
of the ideal nude. Freud made his first etchings of naked figures in 1985,
a year in which he began to work on much larger copper etching plates,
challenging himself to combine linear detail with expansive and complex
compositions. In these etchings, he often omits the background elements
seen in related paintings, leaving his subjects strangely isolated.
One gallery in the exhibition is devoted to naked portraits of women, and
another highlights naked portraits of men. Among the most striking of the
female portraits are the paintings and etchings of Sue Tilley, known as Big
Sue. Without the color or physical substance of paint to map out the
surface of her flesh in the etchings, Freud explored the ways that lines
alone can be used to describe weight, bulk, and texture. The etching Woman
Sleeping (1995) is related to a large painting in which Tilley is portrayed
asleep in a chair inside Freud’s studio. Without the background elements
of the chair and room in the etching, the full weight of her body is left
to float, illogically weightless, on the flat surface of the paper.
Portrait HeadsFreud’s “Portrait Heads” of men and women are grouped in
separate galleries. As in his naked portraits, the subjects of these works
are often portrayed in unguarded states. A dramatic highlight of the
exhibition is a group of three paintings and three etchings depicting Leigh
Bowery (1961-1994), one of Freud’s favorite subjects from 1990 to 1994. An
Australian fashion designer, performance artist, and larger-than-life
personality, Bowery became known for his outrageous costumes and outlandish
behavior on the London club scene in the late 1980s and early 1990s. In
contrast to his brash public persona, the works in the exhibition focus on
the more reflective side of his personality and show him sleeping serenely,
his makeup and costumes stripped away. In the etching Large Head (1993),
Bowery’s pliant features and slack skin are almost palpably rubbery, their
malleability somehow coexisting with the solid weight of his being.
Among the other highlights in the section devoted to male portraits is
Freud’s most recent etching from 2007, Donegal Man, and the related
painting of the same title from 2006. Also on view is a portrait of Lord
Arnold Goodman, Freud’s lawyer and well-known British barrister. For Lord
Goodman in His Yellow Pyjamas (1987), the artist adopted an unusual
horizontal format, to accommodate the thick, broad contours of the
subject’s physique. By positioning himself slightly below Goodman’s sight
line, Freud enhanced his sitter’s looming, confrontational presence.
Among the most accomplished of the female portraits is Bella in Her Pluto
T-Shirt (1995). In it, Freud uses an extraordinary level of detail to
depict the various surfaces and textures, from the long parallel lines of
Bella’s trousers to the thick, choppy lines of the wicker chair, and the
dense allover hatching that covers the background.
Occasional SubjectsWhile human beings are Freud’s central artistic
preoccupation, there are a few other themes that occasionally recur in his
oeuvre. Examples of these subjects are grouped together in one gallery.
They include dogs, mostly whippets, that have been a prominent part of his
life. In his images, they are treated not as accessories but as the equals
of humans, reflecting the artist’s lifelong affinity for animals. Freud’s
whippet Pluto had appeared regularly in his work until her death in 2003,
as seen in the etching Pluto (1988), and the painting Double Portrait
(1985-86). Landscape is a subject Freud sometimes turns to when he is
under strain and prefers working in isolation. Over the past 10 years,
Freud has created several views of his backyard garden in both painting and
etching. With no depth or focal point, the etchings Garden in Winter
(1997-99) and Painter’s Garden (2003-04) demonstrate a dense, allover
handling that is relatively unusual in Freud’s etched work. Freud is also
occasionally inspired to create a new work or works based on paintings by
Old Masters that he admires. The exhibition includes one painting (1999)
and one etching (2000) after Jean-Siméon Chardin’s The Young Schoolmistress
(c. 1735-36).
Organized by Starr Figura, Assistant Curator, Department of Prints and Illustrated Books.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue.
The exhibition is supported in part by Patricia Phelps de Cisneros and The Contemporary Arts Council of The Museum of Modern Art.
Tuesday, January 15, 2008
6:30 p.m.
Panel Discussions & Symposia
Lucian Freud
Department of Communications
phone: (212) 708-9431 fax:(212) 708-9691 e-mail: pressoffice@moma.org
Press Preview: December 11, 2007, 10:00 a.m.−12:00 p.m.
Special Exhibitions Gallery, third floor
The Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53 Street, between Fifth and Sixth avenues
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Sunday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
Monday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
Tuesday closed
Wednesday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
Thursday 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
Friday 10:30 a.m.–8:00 p.m.
Holiday Hours
Thanksgiving day (Nov. 22) Closed
December 24, 10:30 a.m.–3:00 p.m.
Christmas day (Dec. 25) Closed
December 26 & 27, 9:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
December 28, 9:30 a.m.–8:00 p.m.
December 29–31, 9:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.
New Years day (Jan. 1), 10:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m.