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May 28, 2009

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Comments

C

Brilliantly insightful.

But that's coming from a boy listening to Barry Manilow's "Mandy." So do with that compliment what you will.

Joanna

I haven't had the opportunity to see any of Bacon's work except in photos, but your writing about it here makes me want to go find a book about him so I can see at least some reproductions.

murphy9853

Well, you know my stance here.:) I enjoyed your comparison between your dance experience and his painting energy. I believe that all movement/acting is anchored to a point inside the performer and two outside of him. For the actor it is a tension between 1)his inner life and 2)his partner, and 3) the audience. For the painter it is his inner life, the subject, and the canvas. It is the tension and energy flow between these points that the connected artist feels when he is in the zone. It's not of the mind, but visceral. And it's not like the flow of turning on a faucet, it's more like the energy of a rubber band, that all parties grab ahold of and play with to see how far it can be stretched without breaking. This is why I don't find Bacon's paintings depressing. They allows me to contact that energy, which is not an intellectual judgment on the "appropriateness" of the image, but a living, dynamic tension between me, the canvas and Bacon, as I join in on the moment that he made contact with the canvas.

ghost

I saw retrospective last autumn at Tate Britain, dragged there by my other half and loved every minute of it. I even bought biopic of Bacon starring Derek Jacobi, fab you must watch. I will hunt it out and send you the correct title.

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