Showing 24 artworks out of 52 with Francis Bacon and with Portrait Painting
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Experience Francis Bacon’s "Three Studies for John Edwards." A haunting triptych of raw emotion & expressionism. Bold brushstrokes, blue hues, & a profound exploration of the human condition. Own a piece of art history.
Francis Bacon’s ‘Three Studies for a Portrait’ – a hauntingly beautiful depiction of injury & vulnerability in thick impasto. Explore this iconic, unsettling masterpiece.
Three Studies for Self-Portrait, 1980, Center Panel - This iconic piece by Francis Bacon showcases an unsettlingly realistic depiction of a man's face—a haunting exploration of identity and emotion characterized by exaggerated features and a striking blue background.
Three Studies for a Portrait Left by Francis Bacon – An evocative oil painting depicting a man with his hand over his face, framed by glasses and a beard against a textured red cloth background. This unsettling portrait captures the artist's signature style of visceral expressionism.
Explore Francis Bacon’s haunting 'Three Studies for Self-Portrait,' 1980 – a visceral depiction of distorted flesh and shadowed eyes capturing the artist's signature Expressionist style during the postwar era. Discover this iconic piece and bring its unsettling beauty into your home.
A haunting depiction of Isabel Rawsthorne by Francis Bacon, featuring bandages and a masked face amidst geometric structures—a visceral exploration of the human form.
Delve into Francis Bacon's haunting 'Figure Study II,' capturing raw emotion and psychological depth through bold colors & unsettling composition—a cornerstone of post-war expressionism.
Delve into the haunting world of Francis Bacon with ArtsDot. Explore 25 iconic paintings, from his visceral portraits to powerful triptychs. Discover the stories behind these masterpieces & find museum-quality art reproductions for your home.
Francis Bacon, born in Dublin, Ireland, 1909, defied formal training to forge his own artistic path, absorbing influences from diverse sources and creating emotionally charged figurative paintings characterized by distorted forms and existential themes. His work explores vulnerability and brutality.
Study for a Portrait of Van Gogh II, 1957 - Francis Bacon's haunting depiction captures the tormented spirit of Vincent van Gogh through a striking juxtaposition of figures and a vibrant red field. Explore the visceral emotion and symbolic depth of this iconic artwork.
Portrait of Man with Glasses III, 1963 - This striking oil painting by Francis Bacon captures the unsettling gaze of a man obscured by sunglasses. Executed in 1963, it exemplifies Bacon's signature style – visceral emotion conveyed through distorted forms and textures.
Study for Head of Isabel Rawsthorne I by Francis Bacon – A haunting portrait featuring a bird perched on the subject’s nose, capturing a moment of unsettling tension and visceral emotion.
Two Studies for Self-Portrait, 1977 (b) by Francis Bacon – A haunting depiction of the artist’s gaze, rendered in stark black and white with subtle textural variations. Explore Bacon's masterful use of form and emotion to convey profound psychological insight.
The painting depicts a man with a striking white face paint covering, wearing a red shirt and scarf, gazing intently at the viewer against a textured crimson backdrop. Bacon's signature style embodies visceral emotion and psychological exploration.
Study for Head of George Dyer, 1967 - This unsettling portrait by Francis Bacon captures the artist's signature style—a grotesque depiction of human anatomy rendered with muted colors and a palpable sense of psychological torment.
Head IV, 1961 - Francis Bacon: This Expressionist portrait by Francis Bacon depicts a distorted human head bathed in an unsettling green hue, reflecting the artist's signature style and exploring themes of psychological torment and visceral emotion.
Explore Francis Bacon’s haunting ‘Study for Portrait on Folding Bed’, a masterpiece of Expressionism capturing existential angst and psychological tension through bold colors and fragmented forms.
Francis Bacon’s intensely emotive 'Three Studies for a Portrait of Peter Board' captures a haunting close-up of the artist’s eyes, reflecting a visceral mood characteristic of his 1975 paintings. Explore this iconic work and bring home a unique piece of art history.
Self-Portrait 7 - A haunting black and white depiction of Bacon's self-image, capturing profound introspection amidst unsettling stillness. Explore the artist’s visceral exploration of identity and emotion.