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Francis Bacon and Henry Moore together at Art Gallery of Ontario

Henry Moore: Reclining Figure, 1951

Henry Moore: Reclining Figure, 1951
Plaster cast, lenght: 228.5 cm
Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto
Courtesy Craig Boyko, AGO
The Henry Moore Foundation.
All Rights Reserved, DACS / SODRAC (2013)

Francis Bacon: Study for Portrait II

Francis Bacon: Study for Portrait II
(after the Life Mask of William Blake) 1953, Tate
The Estate of Francis Bacon.
All Rights Reserved, DACS/SODRAC (2014)

Francis Bacon and Henry Moore – Art Gallery of Ontario Francis Bacon and Henry Moore: the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) brings two giants of 20th-century British art together in a major exhibition of sculpture and paintings. April 5 to July 20, 2014.]]>

Source: Art Gallery of Ontario

Although they were neither friends nor collaborators, painter Francis Bacon (1909-1992) and sculptor Henry Moore (1898-1986) were contemporaries who shared an obsession with expressing themes of suffering, struggle and survival in relation to the human body. Both artists survived the Second World War and were subsequently haunted by the conflict, which they represented through manifestations of the body in various states of contortion. Drawing on the artists’ own personal experiences during the London Blitz, the exhibition examines how confinement and angst fostered their extraordinary creativity and unique visions.

Guest curated by Dan Adler, associate professor of art history at York University, “Francis Bacon and Henry Moore” is the first Canadian exhibition of Bacon’s work. The presentation also includes never-before-seen Moore artworks, from both the AGO collection and elsewhere. Loans for the exhibition have been secured from several institutions including MoMA, Tate Britain and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago.

The works of Henry Moore are a cornerstone of the AGO collection, and pairing his works with those by Francis Bacon sets them in a brand new light, creating an unparalleled opportunity for visitors to experience some of the most soul-wrenching art of the postwar era,” said AGO Director and CEO Matthew Teitelbaum.

A painter who embraced his passions and despairs, Bacon was known as a tortured soul with sado-masochistic tendencies. His work portrays the body as disfigured and deconstructed, often in states of confinement. However, he did not see his paintings as horrific but instead as life affirming, claiming, “I deform and dislocate people into appearance; or hope to.” Internationally renowned for his large-scale, semi-abstract bronzes, Moore was a British war artist. His sculptures evoke endurance and stability, but when considered in light of his wartime experience, they read as an effort to rebuild and redeem the fragile human psyche and body. The exhibition, which offers in particular a new perspective on Moore, examines how the two artists reflected differently upon the same torment.

Related content

Francis Bacon at Tate Britain (2009)
Henry Moore: Late Large Forms – Gagosian Gallery (2012)

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Francis Bacon and Henry Moore together at Art Gallery of Ontario