Bacon & Picasso
Vis-à-vis

11.08.25.11.2007
11.08.
25.11.2007

The summer exhibition brings together Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) and Francis Bacon (1909–1992), two heroes of 20th-century art. The motto Vis-à-vis refers first of all to the confrontation of painter and sitter, an arrangement that Picasso and Bacon investigated in many paintings. For both artists, art history was also a constant vis-à-vis. The younger Francis Bacon took Picasso, next to the old masters, as a shining example. Despite Bacon’s much-quoted assertions to the effect that his encounter with Picasso’s works in the years around 1930 was the immediate spark behind his career as a painter, it would be totally wrong to describe the relationship between these two great 20th-century artists as one of influence. The exhibition rather traces the common interests of Bacon and Picasso and reveals their individual artistic solutions. The direct vis-à-vis of Picasso and Bacon, which never took place in the lifetimes of the two artists, becomes a reality in this exhibition through the juxtaposition of selected works.

The top-class works on display, over forty in number and produced mostly between the 1960s and the 1980s come, with the exception of a large Bacon triptych, from a European private collection who would prefer not to be known by name. Additionally, a selection of 74 etchings from Picasso’s last print series Suite 156 (1968–1972) will be presented in an extra gallery.

The exhibition is supported by KPMG, Artephila Stiftung, APG Allgemeine Plakatgesellschaft Luzern and anonymous supporters.

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