View the recommended itinerary
PERMANENT COLLECTION
Recommended itinerary
« Go back to the previous page
Francis Bacon
Dublin, Ireland, 1909-Madrid, 1992
1971
Oil on canvas, 198.5 x 147.5 cm
Acquired in 1982
A male figure is reflected in a mirror framed by two white lines, which also depicts part of the circular interior—an arena or a stage for erotic performances—in which it is placed. The geometric and chromatic reduction of the floor, walls and roller blinds forms a sharp contrast with the sensual and elastic treatment of the deformed headless presence that dominates the composition, the plastic quality of which matches the interest that sculpture held for Bacon at the time (he kept a picture of Michelangelo’s Day from the Medici Chapel in his studio). Far from making the room larger, the mirror—a common feature in his oeuvre since the late sixties—stresses the idea of confinement and transforms the viewer into a voyeur of his own distorted reality. Having settled in London in 1925, from 1926 to 1928 Bacon travelled to Berlin, Munich and Paris, where he came into contact with the work of Picasso and Buñuel and began to paint. In the early years of the following decade he produced his first major paintings, albeit the little impact they caused led him to destroy a part of his work and to give up painting completely until 1944. During the fifties he would create his own personal style of figurative painting, inspired by the oeuvre of Rembrandt, Velázquez, Van Gogh and Picasso and by the pioneers of photography. The retrospective exhibition of his works held at the Tate Gallery in 1962 built up his reputation, which was confirmed in 1971 by the huge acclaim of his show at the Grand Palais in Paris. In 1990, two years before his death in Madrid, he visited the Velázquez exhibition at the Prado Museum. [M.G.M.]

You are in
Author: VV.AA.
ISBN: 978-84-15303275
Publication date: 02|03|12
Languages: Spanish
Dimensions: 25 x 30,5 cm
Binding: Paperback
Nº of pages: 592
Nº of illustrations: 1216
PRICE
85 €
The contents of the Mexican Suitcase are presented in a two-volume edition that includes all 4,500 negatives and illustrated
scholarly essays.
Lost since 1939, the Mexican Suitcase contains nearly 4,500 negatives documenting the Spanish Civil War
by Robert Capa, Chim (David Seymour), and Gerda Taro. These films had traveled from Paris via the south of
France to Mexico City, where, almost seventy years later, they were recovered and now reside in the collection
of the International Center of Photography. This material not only provides a uniquely rich and panoramic
view of the Spanish Civil War, a conflict that changed the course of European history, but also demonstrates
how the work of these legendary photographers laid the foundation for modern war photography. Published
throughout the international press, their innovative and passionate coverage of the war was both engaged
and partisan. While overtly supporting the antifascist Republican cause, their dramatic photographs vividly
recorded battle sequences as well as the harrowing effects of war on civilians. Equally compelling are the
stories of the photographers themselves as revealed through their images: the dashing Capa, the studious
Chim, and the intrepid Taro, who died tragically in 1937 during the Battle of Brunete. This is the history of
three young people and the ties—personal, political, artistic—that bound them.