Bacon Quotations

I always think of myself not so much as a painter but as a medium for accident and chance.

Francis Bacon

A selection of Bacon quotations on:

Photo of a wall at the Foundation with some of Francis Bacon's quotes displayed upon it.

A selection of Bacon quotations on:

Other Artists

On Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X

I’ve always thought that this was one of the greatest paintings in the world and I’ve had a crush on it.
I think it is one of the greatest portraits that have ever been made, and I became obsessed with it.
Velázquez was in some ways the most miraculous painter, and he was able to come so near to almost, you could say, illustration, yet with strange and subtle deformations turn these very human and personal things into great images.

On Michelangelo

For me he is one of the very greatest draughtsmen, if not the greatest.
Michelangelo made the most voluptuous male nudes in the plastic arts.

On Picasso

All of Picasso. The man is fascinating. And his work is prolific, unpredictable. His sculptures, his drawings. Without him, I think I would have never used a paintbrush.
Picasso’s works from 1926-1930, his surrealist years with those isolated figures on beaches. It triggered me to want to be a painter. I thought, why don’t I try it myself?
When I talked about the brutality of fact in Picasso, I meant that Picasso in a curious way was able to put it across more directly and with less expressionism in it. It seemed to be the fact itself without the will to express.

On Poussin’s Massacre of the Innocents

I think that probably the best human cry ever painted was by Poussin . . . I went a great deal to Chantilly and I remember this picture always made a terrific impression on me.

On Giacometti

I have always loved Giacometti’s portraits, particularly those done in pencil or charcoal . . . Of everything that he’s done, I much prefer his drawings to his sculpture . . . I think people have failed to appreciate his drawings for a long time and, in my opinion, they’re the strongest things he’s done.

On Henri Michaux

I don’t think it’s abstract . . . I think that he has made the best tachiste or free marks that have been made. I think he is much better in that way, in making free marks, than Jackson Pollock.

On various artists

It’s really the portraits of Rembrandt that I like.
I’ve always taken a look at Ingres from time to time. I especially admire his portraits.
(translated from French)
Van Gogh got very near to the violence of life itself. It’s true to say that when he painted a field he was able to give you the violence of grass.
I think Duchamp deliberately tried to create what is called a myth of our time.
Rauschenberg is an artist who is always very, very inventive to me, and I find his works very, very interesting always.
Diego Velázquez, Portrait of Pope Innocent X, c. 1650, oil on canvas, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Doria Pamphilj Trust, Rome
Diego Velázquez, Portrait of Pope Innocent X, c. 1650, oil on canvas, Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Doria Pamphilj Trust, Rome