Last year, an art historian compiling a catalogue raisonné of Bacon’s oeuvre introduced his final artwork to the public after discovering it in a private collection in London. The piece reflects the British artist’s interest in bullfighting, a recurring motif in his work, but more so, it reads as a meditation on his own mortality. Having spent decades steeped in alcohol and debauchery, Bacon was in ailing health in his later years and knew he was approaching death by the time he painted Study of a Bull.
The bull, a common symbol of male virility, is faded and smudged, caught between the dark unknown and searing, white oblivion. While the bull lacks the usual contorted fleshiness of Bacon’s other figures, it carries a similar pathos and color palette. Bolstering the work’s evocation of death, Bacon incorporated dust from his studio into the composition, recalling the biblical “dust to dust.”
In the 1989 Tim Burton film “Batman,” there is a famous scene
where the Joker and his gang break into an art museum and vandalize
masterpieces by the likes of Rembrandt, Degas, and Vermeer. But, just as
one of his henchmen is about to slash a Francis Bacon canvas, the Joker
steps in to stop him, saying, “I kind of like this one.”
This scene is testament to two things: first Bacon’s status as a
great and acknowledged painter on a par with those others, and, second,
the ugliness and brutality of his work, at least in the conventional
sense, that endears it to a psychopath like the Joker.
It is interesting, therefore, to see what Tokyo will make of the
first retrospective of Bacon since his death in 1992 to be held not only
in Japan but also in Asia — especially as Tokyo is a city that prefers
its art on the pretty side.
Accordingly, during my visit, I made careful note of who came and how
they behaved, making comparisons with other big shows I had seen
recently. Several things stood out: There was greater age diversity and
more men than you might expect, especially as I visited on a weekday.
Also, instead of the wall-hugging conveyer belt of viewers I’ve come to
expect for shows in Japan, visitors moved around more freely and
considered works more intensely. In general, I got the impression of a
more sophisticated art audience than normal.
But we should not be surprised. Bacon’s art acts as a kind of filter,
scaring off certain timid elements. This is of course due to the
conventional ugliness, sordidness and even horror that these paintings
are imbued with. They are clearly not everybody’s cup of tea.
Bacon, painting in an age when figurative art struggled to find a
purpose against all the avant-gardisms, created figures that were
seemingly bruised, bloodied and distorted by the struggle; twisted and
transformed into pained pieces of raw meat, on which the artist’s name
seems to serve as an ironic comment. Also, once you know the backstory
of his homosexuality, a lot of the paintings acquire a vaguely carnal
sexual atmosphere.
But Bacon is a lot more than the average transgressional artist out
to shock and revolt the tea cakes and kittens set. There is an essence
to his work that resonates with the complex and troubled sense of
post-Christian man that emerged in the 20th century. Bacon’s paintings
seem like the visual outcome of Friedrich Nietzsche’s notions of the
death of God and the consequent struggle to inhabit the universe in a
meaningful way that this opens up.
As a young man he was an avid reader of the German philosopher, who
famously wrote “Man is a rope stretched between the animal and the
Superman — a rope over an abyss,” a phrase echoed by Bacon when he
defined his style as “a tightrope walk between figurative painting and
abstraction.” It is the tension between the two that adds drama to his
work, and also humor as he employs single lines and smudges that
nevertheless evoke identifiable quirks and characteristics.
His post-Christianity is most clearly signaled by the paintings that
were inspired (or provoked) by his obsession with Velazquez’s “Portrait
of Pope Innocent X” (1650), a magisterial work that exudes power and
authority. The exhibition includes several of these, including “Study
for the Head of a Screaming Pope” (1952).
These antireligious works, in the absence of any art pointing to a
positive ideal suggest a deep nihilism, but the trouble with nihilism is
that, once embraced, it offers nowhere to go, and is unable to even
keep its bargain of annihilation. Even death can’t entirely eradicate.
This is forcefully shown at this exhibition by “Three Studies of George
Dyer” (1969), one of many triptychs at the show. This depicts Bacon’s
intimate friend the year before he committed suicide, but still as vivid
as Bacon saw him.
In Bacon’s work, there is also a kind of blurred effect, like a
camera with its shutter open too long, suggestive of man in time and
motion, something that also evokes some of the experiments of the
Italian Futurists.
“I would like my pictures to look as if a human being had passed
between them,” Bacon once explained, “like a snail, leaving a trail of
the human presence and memory trace of past events, as the snail leaves
its slime.”
Such restlessness also evokes a kind of human spirit — almost
material in its form — that struggles against death and entropy simply
by being too material and emotional to neatly enter the void.
These deep philosophical notes with which the paintings resonate are
also brilliantly echoed by some complementary pieces. These include
illustrated notes and a video performance by the father of Butoh
dancing, Tatsumi Hijikata, and a large video installation inspired by
Bacon’s unfinished final work. In this, the ballet dancer William
Forsythe occupies an empty space and, simply by being there, is forced
to fight against it and exist.
“Francis Bacon” at The National Museum of Modern Art,
Tokyo runs till May 26; open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. (Fri. till 8 p.m.).¥1,500.
Closed Mon. (except March 25, April 1, 8, 29, May 6), and May 7. www.momat.go.jp
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