Influences on painter Francis Bacon

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The painter Francis Bacon was largely self-taught as an artist. His influences included:

  • Pablo Picasso, in particular the biomorphic figures in Picasso's paintings of bathers at Dinard of 1927-32.
  • Diego Velázquez, Velázquez’s portrait of Pope Innocent X (1649–50). "that Velázquez is one of the great paintings of the world, of course - well, I was very obsessed with that Velázquez and, of course, I made a great mistake…". Bacon painted several versions of it, of which Figure with Meat (1954) is an atypically Grand Guignol example. Bacon never actually saw the original Velázquez.
Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1650, by Diego Velázquez
Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1650, by Diego Velázquez
Crucifix (1287-88), by Cimabue was a recurring influence on much of Bacon's mid-1940s and early 1960s work
Crucifix (1287-88), by Cimabue was a recurring influence on much of Bacon's mid-1940s and early 1960s work
Woman walking downstairs, by Eadweard Muybridge
Woman walking downstairs, by Eadweard Muybridge
  • Nadar
  • John Deakin. Regular at the Colony Room Club and noted photographer who took portraits of Bacons friends on which many of his 1960's paintings were based.
  • Luis Buñuel. "I've been very influenced by the films of Buñuel, especially Un chien andalou because I think that Buñuel had a remarkable precision of imagery. I can't say how they have directly effected me but they certainly have affected my whole attitude to visual things - in the acuteness of the visual image which you've got to make."

Bacon also drew inspiration from the poems of T. S. Eliot, Pound and Yeats; the plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles and Shakespeare; Proust and the Joyce of Ulysses.

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