Marlborough Fine Art to show New Works of Frank Auerbach |
|
|
| Written by rubin |
| Saturday, 04 July 2009 02:27 |
|
London - “Frank Auerbach’s paintings are the full results of tremendous application. They may appear sudden -instantaneous even- but they are feats of concentration. Studied yet impulsive, ranging from darkness to radiance and from the declamatory to the subdued, they are keyed to an air of resolve as unguarded as joy, as involuntary as grief. From the earliest portrait heads to recent sightings of the tower blocks beyond Mornington Crescent, glorified as the sun strikes them, there’s a constant quickening, a pulse of the here and now”. . .William Feaver. On exhibition 23 September – 24 October 2009. Private view Tuesday 22 September 2009 at Marlborough Fine Art, London.
The exhibition will mark the publication by Rizzoli of William Feaver’s monograph. There will be 200 colour plates and a separate reference section comprising images of Auerbach’s works to date – many never before reproduced, ISBN: 978-0-8478-3058-9. A deluxe limited edition including a new etching will also be available, ISBN: 978-0-8478-3303-0. A small survey of Auerbach’s
printmaking will also be shown. Commencing with a group of his earliest
drypoints, from when he was a student at the Royal College of Art in 1954, to
his most recent series of four highly acclaimed etchings on the largest scale
the artist has undertaken to date. A fully illustrated catalogue will
be published. For further
information, please contact Geoffrey Parton, Frankie Rossi or Kate Austin on
0207 629 5161 or
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
“At 74 he is one of the best
painters around” Marlborough Fine Art / 6 Albemarle Street, London W1S 4BY / Tel.0207 629 5161 / www.marlboroughfineart.com Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |


Frank Auerbach will show 20 new
works, landscapes and portrait paintings and drawings, in his first London exhibition for five
years. Tower blocks on the Hampstead Road, Mornington Crescent,
the view from Auerbach’s studio entrance all become subjects for landscape.
Auerbach’s persistent familiarity with his corner of North
London is echoed in his models, close friends and family members who
have committed to a regime of regular sittings week in week out over many years.
‘‘To paint the same head over and over leads to unfamiliarity; eventually you
get near the raw truth about it, just as people only blurt out the raw truth in
the middle of a family quarrel.’’ Auerbach’s heads attempt a presence
underpinned by likeness. His working practise of continual application and
scraping-down of paint puts down a palimpsest as foundation and although the
final work is seemingly the result of one sitting, it takes months, often years,
of weekly sessions to capture something affecting and
true. 
