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Born in Berlin in 1922, Lucian Freud moved to England with his family in 1933. Along with his friend Francis Bacon, he rose to prominence in London in the 1950s and has lived and worked in the city ever since. Freud is regarded as one of the leading figurative artists working today. Freud created his first etchings in Paris in 1946. A natural progression of his work as a draughtsman, his marks and techniques with the etching plate are just as effective as those on paper. In both painting and printmaking his subjects are those close and familiar to him, though often anonymous to the viewer. In the majority of Freud's works everything unnecessary is stripped away, leaving little, if any, color and a minimal background. Unsettling and unyielding, they contain a remarkable honesty; a highly lit reality that is sometimes blinding. Freud's work is a part of many major international collections including
The Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois; The Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland;
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery, Birmingham, England; Carnegie Institute,
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris, France; Hirshhorn
Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; The Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York, New York; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia,
Madrid, Spain; Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid, Spain; Museum of Modern
Art, New York, New York; National Gallery, Cape Town, South Africa; National
Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Scottish National Gallery of Modern
Art, Edinburgh, Scotland; Städelisches Kunstinstitut, Frankfurt, Germany;
Tate Modern, London, England; and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London,
England. |
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