Thursday, November 24, 2016

Fuseli Goya Auerbach

Henry Fuseli
Portrait of Sophia Fuseli
1798
wash drawing
British Museum

Henry Fuseli
Figure study 
1796
wash drawing
British Museum

Henry Fuseli
Figure study
1796
wash drawing
British Museum

Henry Fuseli
Figure study
1801
wash drawing
British Museum

Henry Fuseli (1741-1825)  whose work is above represented the extreme Romantic wing of the Neoclassical revival at the end of the 18th century. Francisco Goya (1746-1828)  whose work is below  was Fuseli's exact contemporary. Their separate spheres of life hardly overlapped, but both were artists who achieved mainstream success within their own societies even while confounding prevailing standards of good taste. And both have graphic work of exceptional beauty in the collections of the British Museum.

Francisco Goya
Lunatics
c. 1825-28
drawing
British Museum

Francisco Goya
King Charles IV & Queen María Luisa on Horseback
ca. 1799
wash drawing
British Museum

Francisco Goya
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington 
1812
drawing
British Museum

Francisco Goya
Pedro Roldàn, Sculptor
ca. 1810
drawing
British Museum

The final four drawings in chalk and charcoal by Frank Auerbach were owned by the artist's friend, Lucian Freud. When Freud died in 2011 they were left to the state in lieu of tax, and have just this year emerged from that post-mortem maze, assigned to reside at the British Museum.

Frank Auerbach
Seated Man with Walking Stick
1949-50
drawing
British Museum
estate of Lucian Freud

Frank Auerbach
Standing Nude
1955
drawing
British Museum
estate of Lucian Freud

Frank Auerbach
Reclining figure
1955
drawing
British Museum
estate of Lucian Freud

Frank Auerbach
Head of EOW
1956
drawing
British Museum
estate of Lucian Freud