Frank Auerbach (b. 1931)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… 显示更多 PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF JAMES MELVIN James Melvin (1912-2011) co-founded architectural firm Gollins Melvin Ward in 1947, along with Frank Gollins and Edmund Ward. Commissions for the practice included the central campus for the University of Sheffield and the twenty-eight storey Commercial Union Tower, the first building in the City to exceed the height of St Paul's Cathedral. During this period James Melvin sat on the Executive committee for the Contemporary Art Society, alongside eminent gallery directors, art critics and collectors, including Sir John Rothenstein, Alan Bowness, Eric Newton, Bryan Robertson and Sir Colin Anderson. This led to his involvement with ground-breaking exhibitions such as 'British Painting in the Sixties', held at the Tate Gallery and Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1963. James Melvin's own art collection demonstrated his discerning eye and appreciation of the sculpture and paintings being produced by Britain's young artists of the post-war period. These included works by Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore, Frank Auerbach and Paul Feiler, and furnished his modernist home displayed alongside sculptures by Alberto Giacometti and prints by Edvard Munch and Pablo Picasso.
Frank Auerbach (b. 1931)

Figure on a Bed III

细节
Frank Auerbach (b. 1931)
Figure on a Bed III
oil on canvas
14 1/8 x 18 in. (35.8 x 45.7 cm.)
Painted in 1969.
来源
with Monika Kinley, London, by 1971.
with Marlborough Gallery, London.
出版
Exhibition catalogue, Frank Auerbach, Arts Council, London, Hayward Gallery, 1978, p. 90, no. 87, illustrated.
W. Feaver, Frank Auerbach, New York, 2009, p. 264, no. 240, illustrated.
展览
London, Arts Council, Hayward Gallery, Frank Auerbach, May - July 1978; this exhibition travelled to Edinburgh, Fruitmarket Gallery, July - August 1978, no. 87.
注意事项
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

拍品专文

Figure on a Bed III is one of a series of paintings completed between 1967 and 1970 depicting Julia Yardley Mills, otherwise known as J.Y.M in a variety of abstracted, contorted poses. J.Y.M, a professional life model whom Auerbach had met whilst teaching at Sidcup College of Art in Kent, began posing for the artist in 1957, continuing to do so for the next more than thirty years. Enthusiastic and quite literally indefatigable, J.Y.M was the first person to be painted in Auerbach’s now much mythologised Mornington Crescent Studio, formerly that of close friend and fellow Royal College of Art alumnus, Leon Kossoff.

‘The dark embryo’ necessary, according to arch modernist T.S Eliot, to accomplish anything in art, is transformed in Figure on a Bed III by Auerbach’s enervating use of colour: bright yellow, dark green, a hint of royal blue and a truncated gash of cadmium red. Instinctual and yet in part circumstantial, Auerbach’s relationship with colour is entirely unique. Dun, earthy colours - terre vert, ochre, indian red, black and flake white had been all that the artist could afford until around 1960 when an annuity of £1,500 from the Beaux Arts Gallery enabled him to buy rarer and more expensive pigments. And yet, unlike works dating from the mid 1960s which boast the thickest impasto of his career, in these later works Auerbach uses his fingers and as well as brushes of no less than two centimetres in width, frequently doused in turpentine, to manipulate the paint across the canvas, creating areas of significant textural difference.

Far from the interminably re-worked, heavily encrusted surfaces of paintings completed only three of four years previously, Figure on a Bed III succeeds ‘making it new’, getting the paint moving in more electrifying ways than one, thereby integrating the artist’s growing sense of paint as an ‘accumulating substance within which the whole world can be experienced’ (Auerbach, quoted in Frank Auerbach, Robert Hughes, London, 1990), with his commitment to patient and repetitive scrutiny.

Indeed, there seems something both fundamentally and methodologically enlightened about Figure on a Bed III, arguably key to which is a kind of wildness, inherent not only in the liberated application of paint but in the essentially unpremeditated agenda of the painting as a whole. Unlike the ostentatious urgency with which Bacon privileges the figure, Auerbach treats the space, the bed and the figure with equal intensity, allowing the dialogue between plasticity and violent feeling initiated by Chaim Soutine and Nicolas de Staël, whose work he admired, to inform and to invigorate the whole. For, although ‘the lump’ on the bed is the focus of the painting’s cryptic energy, one feels a sense in which it is very much a product of cumulative forces.

Beginning ‘as an almost nothing, an incoherence worked on, worked with, worked at’ (Auerbach quoted in W. Feaver, Frank Auerbach, New York, 2009, p. 19). Figure on a Bed III seems the very epitome of Auerbach’s quest not simply ‘to paint another picture’, but to ‘make a new thing for the world that remains in the mind like a new species of living thing’ (Auerbach quoted in ‘A Conversation with Frank Auerbach’, exhibition catalogue, Frank Auerbach, London, Arts Council, Hayward Gallery, 1978).

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