Showing 10 artworks with Francis Bacon and with Oil Paint
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Francis Bacon
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Oil Paint
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- Francis Bacon
- Oil Paint
- Painting
- Expressionism
- Portrait
- Distortion
- Unsettling
- Surrealism
- Figures
- Dublin Artist
- Art
- Emotional Intensity
- Contemporary Art
- Triptych
- Visceral
- Modern Art
- Dublin
- Raw Emotion
- Bed
- Bold Brushstrokes
- Alienation
- Attendants
- 1966 Artwork
- Cat Lap
- 1968
The artwork’s grayscale photograph highlights Bacon’s muted palette and textural brushwork.
Francis Bacon's haunting 'Henrietta Moraes' captures raw emotion & vulnerability through distorted form and visceral red hues. Explore the artist’s exploration of the human condition.
Study of George Dyer, 1971 - An oil expressionist painting by Francis Bacon depicting a man seated with crossed legs and a cat on his lap before a window.
Experience the raw emotion of Francis Bacon's 'Three Studies of Figures on Beds.' This iconic 1972 painting captures unsettling beauty with oil and pastel on canvas – a visceral masterpiece.
Francis Bacon's haunting 'Two Figures Lying on a Bed' (1968) explores trauma and vulnerability through distorted forms & unsettling imagery. A key work of the Expressionist master.
Experience the raw emotion of Francis Bacon's 'Three Figures and Portrait' (1975). This iconic oil painting captures unsettling figures within a claustrophobic space, reflecting his signature style.
Francis Bacon, a name synonymous with the visceral intensity of 20th-century art, was born in Dublin, Ireland, in 1909. Despite lacking formal training, he cultivated a distinctive style influenced by diverse sources, creating unforgettable canvases that grapple with themes of anxiety and isolation.
Francis Bacon's 'Reclining Woman' (1961) is a hauntingly visceral depiction of vulnerability and isolation, rendered in his signature distorted style. Explore the raw emotion captured on canvas.