Francis Bacon Bristish, 1909-1992
overall I. 34 x 89.2 cm (13 3/8 x 35 1/8 in.)
S. 52 x 94 cm (20 1/2 x 37 in.)
In Francis Bacon’s Trois études pour un autoportrait,
 the artist presents three depictions of his own face from shifting 
perspectives, isolated against an abyss of black. His face has been 
illuminated in three disparate flash-bulb moments, his features both 
emerge from and are invaded by the surrounding void of darkness. This 
ambivalence evokes a dizzying sense of motion, revolving around the 
central panel in which the artist’s melancholic face is directed 
outwards, mirroring the viewer looking in. Blurred and distorted, the 
restlessness of the composition elicits a sense of psychological 
distress in the subject.
Mortality is an ever-present theme that underpins Bacon’s oeuvre and in 
his self-portraits it comes to its zenith. In a 1975 interview, Bacon 
said to David Sylvester ‘I loathe my own face… I’ve done a lot of 
self-portraits, really because people have been dying around me like 
flies and I’ve nobody else left to paint but myself.’ In the mid-1970s, 
many of the people closest to Bacon passed away, causing him to begin 
his most prolonged and intense period of self-portraiture in his career.
 Painting his own face almost obsessively, after hours of close 
self-examination from either photographs of himself or from staring in 
the mirror, the self-portraits are highly analytical investigations into
 his inner psyche. Intensely ruminating on mortality, the works are 
windows that reveal an undeniable existential truth about the human 
condition.
Provenance
Charles Riva CollectionLiterature
Bruno Sabatier 26Alexandre Tacou 28