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Lucian Freud. New Perspectives

Finished
Lucian Freud. Reflejo con dos niños (Autorretrato), 1965. Óleo sobre lienzo. 91 x 91 cm. © The Lucian Freud Archive
Lucian Freud. Autorretrato (Fragmento), 1956. Óleo sobre lienzo. 61 x 61 cm. Colección privada. © The Lucian Freud Archive. All Rights Reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Lucian Freud. Doble retrato, 1985-1986. Óleo sobre lienzo. 78,8 x 88,9 cm. Colección privada. © The Lucian Freud Archive. All Rights Reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Lucian Freud. El cuarto del pintor, 1944. Óleo sobre lienzo. 62,2 x 76,2 cm. Colección privada. © The Lucian Freud Archive. All Rights Reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
Gran interior, Notting Hill, 1998. Óleo sobre lienzo. 214 x 178 cm. Colección privada. © The Lucian Freud Archive. All Rights Reserved 2022 / Bridgeman Images
    Information

    The Thyssen-Bornemisza National Museum is hosting a retrospective on the artist and the work of the British painter, Lucian Freud (1922-2011) from 14 February to 18 June in collaboration with the National Gallery to mark the centenary of his birth.

    The exhibition, which opened in October 2022 at the National Gallery, is coming to Madrid in February 2023 to display around fifty works that review the career, spanning seven decades, of one of the most important European artists of the 20th century.

    His work reveals a series of allusions to the great masters of the past, from Egyptian art to Ingres, Courbet, Rodin and Cézanne and encompassing Grünewald, Hals, Velázquez, Rembrandt, Daumier, Watteau or Géricault,  What really interested the artist was to reveal his personal meta-artistic reflection to the spectator and “the intensification of reality” which he always aspired to achieve.   

    The New Perspectives exhibition is divided into various sections that offer a chronological survey of the painter’s evolution and subject matter: Becoming Freud, devoted to the artist’s early works which are notably figurative in the face of the prevailing abstract trends of the period; Early Portraits, which reveal Freud’s desire to capture the essence of his sitters; Intimacy, which focuses on his preference for depicting people from his close circle; Power, presents portraits of individuals who he agreed to paint on the basis that they accepted his working conditions; The Studio, his creative space which became a subject in his art; and finally, Flesh, featuring the artist’s naked portraits, that reveal his profound observation of the human body. 

    Image Credit:

    Lucian Freud. Reflection with Two Children (Self-portrait), 1965. Oil on Canvas. 91 x 91 cm. © The Lucian Freud Archive

    Last updated: 18/05/2024
    Practical Information
    Event
    When
    From 14 February to 18 June
    Address
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    del Prado, 8
    28014
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    Prices
    Times

    Tues to Fri and Sun: 10am - 7pm

    Sat: 10am - 9pm

    Mon: Closed

    Type
    Exhibitions
    Painting
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