Bacon and the Louvre

Francis Bacon was a frequent visitor to the Louvre. The artworks he most admired there, some of which were sources of inspiration for his own pictures, included Egyptian antiquities, Archaic Greek art and French, Italian, Spanish and Dutch paintings.

Ingres, Œdipe explique l’énigme du sphinx (1808)
Ingres, Œdipe explique l’énigme du sphinx (1808)
Bacon, Oedipus and the Sphinx after Ingres (1983)
Bacon, Oedipus and the Sphinx after Ingres (1983)
Michelangelo, Dying Slave (1513‒1515)
Michelangelo, Dying Slave (1513‒1515)
Bacon, Painting (1950)
Bacon, Painting (1950)
Rembrandt, Flayed Ox (1655)
Rembrandt, Flayed Ox (1655)
Bacon, Painting 1946
Bacon, Painting 1946
Francis Bacon, Carcass of Meat and Bird of Prey, 1980, oil and dry transfer lettering on canvas, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon
Bacon, Carcass of Meat and Bird of Prey (1980)
Ingres, Le Bain turc (1862)
Ingres, Le Bain turc (1862)
Bacon, Study of the Human Body – from a drawing by Ingres (1982), right panel of Diptych 1982-84
Bacon, Study of the Human Body – from a drawing by Ingres (1982), right panel of Diptych 1982-84
Chardin, Autoportrait aux bésicles (1771)
Chardin, Autoportrait aux bésicles (1771)
Bacon, Study of Reinhard Hassert; Study of Eddy Batache (1979)
Bacon, Study of Reinhard Hassert; Study of Eddy Batache (1979)