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The Scandalous Life of Francis Bacon, the Artist Who Defied Convention: Art History School
Please consider subscribing to this channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/arthistoryschool?sub_confirmation=1
And supporting this channel on Patreon, https://patreon.com/paulpriestleyart many thanks!
Francis Bacon was an English painter known for his striking, often disturbing portraits and images. Born in Dublin, Ireland in 1909, he moved to London as a young man and began studying art. After experimenting with several styles, he developed his signature technique, which involved distorting and abstracting the human form to create powerful, emotionally charged images.
Bacon's paintings often featured contorted figures, stark backgrounds, and intense, contrasting colors. His work was influenced by a wide range of sources, including art history, literature, and the human body itself. He beca...
published: 19 Apr 2021
-
He DESTROYED His Million Dollar Paintings | Francis Bacon
What do you do when you don’t want your work to be salvaged? After finding people rummaging through his trash in search of his discarded paintings, figurative artist Francis Bacon started slashing his paintings so that they may be irrecoverable. Hundreds of his paintings were found cut and destroyed. What leads an artist to use violence against his own art? How does an artist decide which painting is worthy of keeping and which is not? His 1962 painting Gorilla With Microphones was one of these paintings to be violently discarded. To continue our conversation on what art is or whether AI art is real art or not, today we explore what makes art worthy of being kept, and what type of art is to be violently cut up and thrown away.
As always you can join in on the conversation later today whe...
published: 05 Mar 2023
-
Francis Bacon's Screaming Pope
Inspired by Battleship Potemkin and Portrait of Pope Innocent X by Diego Velazquez, Francis Bacon painted Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X, a scary yet beautiful painting. It’s one of Bacon’s most famous paintings and one of the best display of his iconic violent brushstrokes. The violence contained in this painting is as horrifying as its subject.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TheCanvas
published: 08 Jan 2020
-
Francis Bacon Reveals the Inner Turmoil in his Art
#francisbacon
Painted in 1963, ‘Turning Figure’ by Francis Bacon comes from a period of extraordinary creativity in the artist’s career. In this episode of Masterworks, hear Bacon discuss human behaviour and reveal the thought process behind his paintings of distorted human figures. Drawing on art historical references and the solace Bacon found in literature, ‘Turning Figure’ represents a milestone in Bacon’s oeuvre and is a highlight of our upcoming Contemporary Art Evening Auction (11 February | London). Click here to watch more Sotheby’s videos.
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/sothebys/?sub...
FOR MORE NEWS FROM SOTHEBY’S
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sothebys/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sothebys
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sothebys
published: 17 Jan 2020
-
Francis Bacon - A Tainted Talent (Part 1)
This video contains flashing images, viewer discretion is advised.
This is the story and artwork of Francis Bacon, the famous, Irish-born experimental and figurative painter born in 1909, in Dublin. His paintings were a prominent presence within the art community over many decades following the end of WW2, after exhibiting his tryptic called "Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion", which would stun all that first saw it.
In this first segment of the documentary, we explore where Francis Bacon came from, how he discovered art and, from a certain point of view, where his inspiration for his trademark dark imagery first manifested.
Full Series Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrk971WXT-U_KbNX_lIpSMvdpNzei03YC
-
ARTIST CORNER: Today’s featured artist is Kerry ...
published: 27 Feb 2022
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FRANCIS BACON PARA O ENEM
Entenda a Filosofia de Francis Bacon e o Empirismo Indutivo para o ENEM e outros vestibulares.
Conheça o História 10 e se prepare para o ENEM: http://historia10.com.br
Estude geografia com o CANAL QUATERNÁRIO: https://goo.gl/kZUVFn
Seja um apoiador do Parabólica: https://apoia.se/parabolica
Me siga nas redes sociais:
Meu Instagram: http://instagram.com/opedrorenno/
Meu Twitter: https://twitter.com/opedrorenno
Meu Facebook: http://facebook.com/parabolicaonline
published: 27 Sep 2018
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Francis Bacon: Introduction to the Philosophy of Induction
An introduction to the philosophy of Francis Bacon, the father of empiricism. Bacon was born in London in 1561. He was an establishment figure born into one of the most powerful families in Britain. He as a member of the house of commons and the house of lords for 37 years, a lawyer, Attorney General, and a member of the Privy Council, the group who advises the monarch. He died of pneumonia after carrying out experiments with ice in 1626.
He’s interested in the question of what is useful, practical, the pursuit of improving our place in the world. He thought that the scholastic philosophy taught at the time was dry, closed off, esoteric, at a dead end.
First, to know the truth we have to be able to distinguish it from falsehood and for Bacon, the mind does a good job at distorting the tr...
published: 10 Nov 2020
-
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast | Tour
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast is a new major exhibition at the Royal Academy spanning the artist's 50-year career.
Curator and friend of Bacon, Michael Peppiatt, talks about the exhibition and how the artist's vision of humanity was shaped by his interest in animals.
Read more about how animals influenced Bacon's work: https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/article/francis-bacon-safari-ra-magazine
published: 03 Mar 2022
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Francis Bacon - The South Bank Show (Portrait 1985) dt. UT
"If you watch this Emmy Award-winning profile of Francis Bacon, you'll always remember these 54 minutes. A production of London Weekend Television (now ITV London), The South Bank Show offered documentary portraits of well-known artists and performers from Douglas Adams to Steve Reich to Terry Gilliam to the Pet Shop Boys. Only natural, then, that it would turn its lens toward Bacon in 1985, when his canvasses of human figures, often in triptych, just abstracted enough to cause subconscious trouble, reached a peak on the art market. Roving from gallery to studio to café to bar, the program reveals an artist, one then held, in the words of host Melvyn Bragg, to be "the greatest living painter in the world." (Source: Open Culture)
published: 14 Jun 2019
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Damien Hirst on Francis Bacon | Artist Interview | TateShots
When Damien Hirst was a kid, he says, 'All my paintings were like bad Bacons'.
We invited Damien to Tate Britain to see the Francis Bacon retrospective. He tells us why he loves the Crucifixion and Head series': detail that vanishes the closer you get, paint like blood and guts. 'That's probably why I love Bacon paintings. When I first saw them they reminded me of places I'd seen in nightmares.'
published: 03 Dec 2008
18:28
The Scandalous Life of Francis Bacon, the Artist Who Defied Convention: Art History School
Please consider subscribing to this channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/arthistoryschool?sub_confirmation=1
And supporting this channel on Patreon, https://patre...
Please consider subscribing to this channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/arthistoryschool?sub_confirmation=1
And supporting this channel on Patreon, https://patreon.com/paulpriestleyart many thanks!
Francis Bacon was an English painter known for his striking, often disturbing portraits and images. Born in Dublin, Ireland in 1909, he moved to London as a young man and began studying art. After experimenting with several styles, he developed his signature technique, which involved distorting and abstracting the human form to create powerful, emotionally charged images.
Bacon's paintings often featured contorted figures, stark backgrounds, and intense, contrasting colors. His work was influenced by a wide range of sources, including art history, literature, and the human body itself. He became known for his ability to convey complex emotions and psychological states through his art.
Bacon's career was marked by both critical acclaim and controversy. His paintings were celebrated by many art critics and collectors, but were also considered shocking and disturbing by some. Despite this, he continued to create groundbreaking art until his death in 1992.
Today, Francis Bacon is widely regarded as one of the most important painters of the 20th century. His work continues to be exhibited and studied around the world, and his legacy as a pioneering artist remains secure. In 2013 his painting "Three Studies of Lucian Freud" became the most expensive work sold at auction - $142.4 million at Christie's in New York.
Checkout my video on British Artist: Stanley Spencer https://youtu.be/v3Sm9HEmmG4
Interested in DRAWING? Check out my drawing channel: https://youtube.com/paulpriestleyart
Would you like me to critique your drawing? Sign up here:-
https:patreon.com/paulpriestleyart
Want this video in your own language? Check out my video to see how: https://youtu.be/ZnoxutAvyaI
For drawing and painting art tutorials designed for beginners - visit my website: - https://paulpriestleyart.com
Follow our Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/PaulPriestleyArtVideos/
Follow our Twitter page:
https://twitter.com/PriestleyonArt
PATREON: I'd like to thank the following patrons whose support in the making of this video is much appreciated: Dee Ann Havely, Deirdre Feely, Denise Berg, Ivan Gilbert Rappaport, Mary Stewart, Nicolae Opris, S. Ryckman, Tatiana Lostorto, Tess N, Tina Valentine, Visnja Zeljeznjak, Linda Frazier, Marnie Coutts, Stein Harald Os, Emily Liss, William Scott Griffiths, Dinny Hinds, Patrick Lefebvre, Philip Levene, Alena Sidorkina, Jeff Smith, Ashok Kanagasundram, Olivia McGoldrick, Rahman Yii, Sarah Hirsch, Kevin Coburn, Stacy Schweigler and Susan Valliant
https://wn.com/The_Scandalous_Life_Of_Francis_Bacon,_The_Artist_Who_Defied_Convention_Art_History_School
Please consider subscribing to this channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/arthistoryschool?sub_confirmation=1
And supporting this channel on Patreon, https://patreon.com/paulpriestleyart many thanks!
Francis Bacon was an English painter known for his striking, often disturbing portraits and images. Born in Dublin, Ireland in 1909, he moved to London as a young man and began studying art. After experimenting with several styles, he developed his signature technique, which involved distorting and abstracting the human form to create powerful, emotionally charged images.
Bacon's paintings often featured contorted figures, stark backgrounds, and intense, contrasting colors. His work was influenced by a wide range of sources, including art history, literature, and the human body itself. He became known for his ability to convey complex emotions and psychological states through his art.
Bacon's career was marked by both critical acclaim and controversy. His paintings were celebrated by many art critics and collectors, but were also considered shocking and disturbing by some. Despite this, he continued to create groundbreaking art until his death in 1992.
Today, Francis Bacon is widely regarded as one of the most important painters of the 20th century. His work continues to be exhibited and studied around the world, and his legacy as a pioneering artist remains secure. In 2013 his painting "Three Studies of Lucian Freud" became the most expensive work sold at auction - $142.4 million at Christie's in New York.
Checkout my video on British Artist: Stanley Spencer https://youtu.be/v3Sm9HEmmG4
Interested in DRAWING? Check out my drawing channel: https://youtube.com/paulpriestleyart
Would you like me to critique your drawing? Sign up here:-
https:patreon.com/paulpriestleyart
Want this video in your own language? Check out my video to see how: https://youtu.be/ZnoxutAvyaI
For drawing and painting art tutorials designed for beginners - visit my website: - https://paulpriestleyart.com
Follow our Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/PaulPriestleyArtVideos/
Follow our Twitter page:
https://twitter.com/PriestleyonArt
PATREON: I'd like to thank the following patrons whose support in the making of this video is much appreciated: Dee Ann Havely, Deirdre Feely, Denise Berg, Ivan Gilbert Rappaport, Mary Stewart, Nicolae Opris, S. Ryckman, Tatiana Lostorto, Tess N, Tina Valentine, Visnja Zeljeznjak, Linda Frazier, Marnie Coutts, Stein Harald Os, Emily Liss, William Scott Griffiths, Dinny Hinds, Patrick Lefebvre, Philip Levene, Alena Sidorkina, Jeff Smith, Ashok Kanagasundram, Olivia McGoldrick, Rahman Yii, Sarah Hirsch, Kevin Coburn, Stacy Schweigler and Susan Valliant
- published: 19 Apr 2021
- views: 168433
8:22
He DESTROYED His Million Dollar Paintings | Francis Bacon
What do you do when you don’t want your work to be salvaged? After finding people rummaging through his trash in search of his discarded paintings, figurative a...
What do you do when you don’t want your work to be salvaged? After finding people rummaging through his trash in search of his discarded paintings, figurative artist Francis Bacon started slashing his paintings so that they may be irrecoverable. Hundreds of his paintings were found cut and destroyed. What leads an artist to use violence against his own art? How does an artist decide which painting is worthy of keeping and which is not? His 1962 painting Gorilla With Microphones was one of these paintings to be violently discarded. To continue our conversation on what art is or whether AI art is real art or not, today we explore what makes art worthy of being kept, and what type of art is to be violently cut up and thrown away.
As always you can join in on the conversation later today when I am Live on YouTube at 4pm EST or 1pm PST, or you can leave a comment down below.
If you enjoy watching our videos, and would like to support us, check us out on Patreon: https://www.Patreon.com/TheCanvas
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/thecanvasyoutube/
#art #videoessay #FrancisBacon #ScreamingPope
https://wn.com/He_Destroyed_His_Million_Dollar_Paintings_|_Francis_Bacon
What do you do when you don’t want your work to be salvaged? After finding people rummaging through his trash in search of his discarded paintings, figurative artist Francis Bacon started slashing his paintings so that they may be irrecoverable. Hundreds of his paintings were found cut and destroyed. What leads an artist to use violence against his own art? How does an artist decide which painting is worthy of keeping and which is not? His 1962 painting Gorilla With Microphones was one of these paintings to be violently discarded. To continue our conversation on what art is or whether AI art is real art or not, today we explore what makes art worthy of being kept, and what type of art is to be violently cut up and thrown away.
As always you can join in on the conversation later today when I am Live on YouTube at 4pm EST or 1pm PST, or you can leave a comment down below.
If you enjoy watching our videos, and would like to support us, check us out on Patreon: https://www.Patreon.com/TheCanvas
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/thecanvasyoutube/
#art #videoessay #FrancisBacon #ScreamingPope
- published: 05 Mar 2023
- views: 37937
7:42
Francis Bacon's Screaming Pope
Inspired by Battleship Potemkin and Portrait of Pope Innocent X by Diego Velazquez, Francis Bacon painted Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X, a...
Inspired by Battleship Potemkin and Portrait of Pope Innocent X by Diego Velazquez, Francis Bacon painted Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X, a scary yet beautiful painting. It’s one of Bacon’s most famous paintings and one of the best display of his iconic violent brushstrokes. The violence contained in this painting is as horrifying as its subject.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TheCanvas
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon's_Screaming_Pope
Inspired by Battleship Potemkin and Portrait of Pope Innocent X by Diego Velazquez, Francis Bacon painted Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X, a scary yet beautiful painting. It’s one of Bacon’s most famous paintings and one of the best display of his iconic violent brushstrokes. The violence contained in this painting is as horrifying as its subject.
Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/TheCanvas
- published: 08 Jan 2020
- views: 340049
1:52
Francis Bacon Reveals the Inner Turmoil in his Art
#francisbacon
Painted in 1963, ‘Turning Figure’ by Francis Bacon comes from a period of extraordinary creativity in the artist’s career. In this episode of Mast...
#francisbacon
Painted in 1963, ‘Turning Figure’ by Francis Bacon comes from a period of extraordinary creativity in the artist’s career. In this episode of Masterworks, hear Bacon discuss human behaviour and reveal the thought process behind his paintings of distorted human figures. Drawing on art historical references and the solace Bacon found in literature, ‘Turning Figure’ represents a milestone in Bacon’s oeuvre and is a highlight of our upcoming Contemporary Art Evening Auction (11 February | London). Click here to watch more Sotheby’s videos.
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/sothebys/?sub...
FOR MORE NEWS FROM SOTHEBY’S
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sothebys/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sothebys
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sothebys
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon_Reveals_The_Inner_Turmoil_In_His_Art
#francisbacon
Painted in 1963, ‘Turning Figure’ by Francis Bacon comes from a period of extraordinary creativity in the artist’s career. In this episode of Masterworks, hear Bacon discuss human behaviour and reveal the thought process behind his paintings of distorted human figures. Drawing on art historical references and the solace Bacon found in literature, ‘Turning Figure’ represents a milestone in Bacon’s oeuvre and is a highlight of our upcoming Contemporary Art Evening Auction (11 February | London). Click here to watch more Sotheby’s videos.
SUBSCRIBE: https://www.youtube.com/sothebys/?sub...
FOR MORE NEWS FROM SOTHEBY’S
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sothebys/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/sothebys
Twitter: https://twitter.com/sothebys
- published: 17 Jan 2020
- views: 19619
39:13
Francis Bacon - A Tainted Talent (Part 1)
This video contains flashing images, viewer discretion is advised.
This is the story and artwork of Francis Bacon, the famous, Irish-born experimental and figu...
This video contains flashing images, viewer discretion is advised.
This is the story and artwork of Francis Bacon, the famous, Irish-born experimental and figurative painter born in 1909, in Dublin. His paintings were a prominent presence within the art community over many decades following the end of WW2, after exhibiting his tryptic called "Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion", which would stun all that first saw it.
In this first segment of the documentary, we explore where Francis Bacon came from, how he discovered art and, from a certain point of view, where his inspiration for his trademark dark imagery first manifested.
Full Series Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrk971WXT-U_KbNX_lIpSMvdpNzei03YC
-
ARTIST CORNER: Today’s featured artist is Kerry Swift, an outsider painter currently based in Wisconsin, USA. I highly recommend you take a look at her YouTube channel under the name "Silent Lefthand", where you can see more of her art as well as some vlogs relating to her paintings. Also if you search for the name Swiffson Art Gallery in Facebook, you’ll be able to see more of her art there as well some of her husband’s work, which again is some very impressive outsider art.
-
Submit your art or say hi:
Email -
[email protected]
Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/blinddweller
Discord - http://discord.com/invite/E4864W5snn
Patreon - http://www.patreon.com/blinddweller
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon_A_Tainted_Talent_(Part_1)
This video contains flashing images, viewer discretion is advised.
This is the story and artwork of Francis Bacon, the famous, Irish-born experimental and figurative painter born in 1909, in Dublin. His paintings were a prominent presence within the art community over many decades following the end of WW2, after exhibiting his tryptic called "Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion", which would stun all that first saw it.
In this first segment of the documentary, we explore where Francis Bacon came from, how he discovered art and, from a certain point of view, where his inspiration for his trademark dark imagery first manifested.
Full Series Playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLrk971WXT-U_KbNX_lIpSMvdpNzei03YC
-
ARTIST CORNER: Today’s featured artist is Kerry Swift, an outsider painter currently based in Wisconsin, USA. I highly recommend you take a look at her YouTube channel under the name "Silent Lefthand", where you can see more of her art as well as some vlogs relating to her paintings. Also if you search for the name Swiffson Art Gallery in Facebook, you’ll be able to see more of her art there as well some of her husband’s work, which again is some very impressive outsider art.
-
Submit your art or say hi:
Email -
[email protected]
Instagram - http://www.instagram.com/blinddweller
Discord - http://discord.com/invite/E4864W5snn
Patreon - http://www.patreon.com/blinddweller
- published: 27 Feb 2022
- views: 276416
15:56
FRANCIS BACON PARA O ENEM
Entenda a Filosofia de Francis Bacon e o Empirismo Indutivo para o ENEM e outros vestibulares.
Conheça o História 10 e se prepare para o ENEM: http://historia1...
Entenda a Filosofia de Francis Bacon e o Empirismo Indutivo para o ENEM e outros vestibulares.
Conheça o História 10 e se prepare para o ENEM: http://historia10.com.br
Estude geografia com o CANAL QUATERNÁRIO: https://goo.gl/kZUVFn
Seja um apoiador do Parabólica: https://apoia.se/parabolica
Me siga nas redes sociais:
Meu Instagram: http://instagram.com/opedrorenno/
Meu Twitter: https://twitter.com/opedrorenno
Meu Facebook: http://facebook.com/parabolicaonline
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon_Para_O_Enem
Entenda a Filosofia de Francis Bacon e o Empirismo Indutivo para o ENEM e outros vestibulares.
Conheça o História 10 e se prepare para o ENEM: http://historia10.com.br
Estude geografia com o CANAL QUATERNÁRIO: https://goo.gl/kZUVFn
Seja um apoiador do Parabólica: https://apoia.se/parabolica
Me siga nas redes sociais:
Meu Instagram: http://instagram.com/opedrorenno/
Meu Twitter: https://twitter.com/opedrorenno
Meu Facebook: http://facebook.com/parabolicaonline
- published: 27 Sep 2018
- views: 134865
15:40
Francis Bacon: Introduction to the Philosophy of Induction
An introduction to the philosophy of Francis Bacon, the father of empiricism. Bacon was born in London in 1561. He was an establishment figure born into one of ...
An introduction to the philosophy of Francis Bacon, the father of empiricism. Bacon was born in London in 1561. He was an establishment figure born into one of the most powerful families in Britain. He as a member of the house of commons and the house of lords for 37 years, a lawyer, Attorney General, and a member of the Privy Council, the group who advises the monarch. He died of pneumonia after carrying out experiments with ice in 1626.
He’s interested in the question of what is useful, practical, the pursuit of improving our place in the world. He thought that the scholastic philosophy taught at the time was dry, closed off, esoteric, at a dead end.
First, to know the truth we have to be able to distinguish it from falsehood and for Bacon, the mind does a good job at distorting the truth.
He said that the mind was a ‘crooked mirror’, distorted by what he called idols. He wrote: There are four idols: idols of the tribe, idols of the cave, idols of the marketplace, and idols of the theatre.
To remedy the effect the idols have on the pursuit of knowledge, Bacon advocates for induction: the scientific method.
The Baconian Method starts with simple observations. He said ‘a new beginning has to be made from the lowest foundations.’ Instead of starting at the top, from general ideas, we start from the bottom, from particular observations, and work upwards to ‘general truths’ or axioms.
Then & Now is FAN-FUNDED! Support me on Patreon and pledge as little as $1 per video: http://patreon.com/user?u=3517018
Or send me a one-off tip of any amount and help me make more videos:
https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=JJ76W4CZ2A8J2
Buy on Amazon through this link to support the channel:
https://amzn.to/2ykJe6L
Follow me on:
Facebook: http://fb.me/thethenandnow
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thethenandnow/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/lewlewwaller
Subscribe to the podcast:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/then-now-philosophy-history-politics/id1499254204
https://open.spotify.com/show/1Khac2ih0UYUtuIJEWL47z
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon_Introduction_To_The_Philosophy_Of_Induction
An introduction to the philosophy of Francis Bacon, the father of empiricism. Bacon was born in London in 1561. He was an establishment figure born into one of the most powerful families in Britain. He as a member of the house of commons and the house of lords for 37 years, a lawyer, Attorney General, and a member of the Privy Council, the group who advises the monarch. He died of pneumonia after carrying out experiments with ice in 1626.
He’s interested in the question of what is useful, practical, the pursuit of improving our place in the world. He thought that the scholastic philosophy taught at the time was dry, closed off, esoteric, at a dead end.
First, to know the truth we have to be able to distinguish it from falsehood and for Bacon, the mind does a good job at distorting the truth.
He said that the mind was a ‘crooked mirror’, distorted by what he called idols. He wrote: There are four idols: idols of the tribe, idols of the cave, idols of the marketplace, and idols of the theatre.
To remedy the effect the idols have on the pursuit of knowledge, Bacon advocates for induction: the scientific method.
The Baconian Method starts with simple observations. He said ‘a new beginning has to be made from the lowest foundations.’ Instead of starting at the top, from general ideas, we start from the bottom, from particular observations, and work upwards to ‘general truths’ or axioms.
Then & Now is FAN-FUNDED! Support me on Patreon and pledge as little as $1 per video: http://patreon.com/user?u=3517018
Or send me a one-off tip of any amount and help me make more videos:
https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=JJ76W4CZ2A8J2
Buy on Amazon through this link to support the channel:
https://amzn.to/2ykJe6L
Follow me on:
Facebook: http://fb.me/thethenandnow
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thethenandnow/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/lewlewwaller
Subscribe to the podcast:
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/then-now-philosophy-history-politics/id1499254204
https://open.spotify.com/show/1Khac2ih0UYUtuIJEWL47z
- published: 10 Nov 2020
- views: 40639
5:22
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast | Tour
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast is a new major exhibition at the Royal Academy spanning the artist's 50-year career.
Curator and friend of Bacon, Michael Peppiatt...
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast is a new major exhibition at the Royal Academy spanning the artist's 50-year career.
Curator and friend of Bacon, Michael Peppiatt, talks about the exhibition and how the artist's vision of humanity was shaped by his interest in animals.
Read more about how animals influenced Bacon's work: https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/article/francis-bacon-safari-ra-magazine
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon_Man_And_Beast_|_Tour
Francis Bacon: Man and Beast is a new major exhibition at the Royal Academy spanning the artist's 50-year career.
Curator and friend of Bacon, Michael Peppiatt, talks about the exhibition and how the artist's vision of humanity was shaped by his interest in animals.
Read more about how animals influenced Bacon's work: https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/article/francis-bacon-safari-ra-magazine
- published: 03 Mar 2022
- views: 14228
54:12
Francis Bacon - The South Bank Show (Portrait 1985) dt. UT
"If you watch this Emmy Award-winning profile of Francis Bacon, you'll always remember these 54 minutes. A production of London Weekend Television (now ITV Lond...
"If you watch this Emmy Award-winning profile of Francis Bacon, you'll always remember these 54 minutes. A production of London Weekend Television (now ITV London), The South Bank Show offered documentary portraits of well-known artists and performers from Douglas Adams to Steve Reich to Terry Gilliam to the Pet Shop Boys. Only natural, then, that it would turn its lens toward Bacon in 1985, when his canvasses of human figures, often in triptych, just abstracted enough to cause subconscious trouble, reached a peak on the art market. Roving from gallery to studio to café to bar, the program reveals an artist, one then held, in the words of host Melvyn Bragg, to be "the greatest living painter in the world." (Source: Open Culture)
https://wn.com/Francis_Bacon_The_South_Bank_Show_(Portrait_1985)_Dt._Ut
"If you watch this Emmy Award-winning profile of Francis Bacon, you'll always remember these 54 minutes. A production of London Weekend Television (now ITV London), The South Bank Show offered documentary portraits of well-known artists and performers from Douglas Adams to Steve Reich to Terry Gilliam to the Pet Shop Boys. Only natural, then, that it would turn its lens toward Bacon in 1985, when his canvasses of human figures, often in triptych, just abstracted enough to cause subconscious trouble, reached a peak on the art market. Roving from gallery to studio to café to bar, the program reveals an artist, one then held, in the words of host Melvyn Bragg, to be "the greatest living painter in the world." (Source: Open Culture)
- published: 14 Jun 2019
- views: 59654
4:59
Damien Hirst on Francis Bacon | Artist Interview | TateShots
When Damien Hirst was a kid, he says, 'All my paintings were like bad Bacons'.
We invited Damien to Tate Britain to see the Francis Bacon retrospective. He tel...
When Damien Hirst was a kid, he says, 'All my paintings were like bad Bacons'.
We invited Damien to Tate Britain to see the Francis Bacon retrospective. He tells us why he loves the Crucifixion and Head series': detail that vanishes the closer you get, paint like blood and guts. 'That's probably why I love Bacon paintings. When I first saw them they reminded me of places I'd seen in nightmares.'
https://wn.com/Damien_Hirst_On_Francis_Bacon_|_Artist_Interview_|_Tateshots
When Damien Hirst was a kid, he says, 'All my paintings were like bad Bacons'.
We invited Damien to Tate Britain to see the Francis Bacon retrospective. He tells us why he loves the Crucifixion and Head series': detail that vanishes the closer you get, paint like blood and guts. 'That's probably why I love Bacon paintings. When I first saw them they reminded me of places I'd seen in nightmares.'
- published: 03 Dec 2008
- views: 168189