November 5th, 2020 and January 5th & 19th , 2021

Private visit of the Francis Bacon MB Art Foundation in Monaco

Francis Bacon MB Art Foundation

The Francis Bacon MB Art Foundation was created in 2014. This institute’s mission is to promote a deeper understanding of Francis Bacon’s art works, life and methods, with a particular focus on the time he lived and worked in Monaco and France. The self-taught artist, who described his images as ‘a concentration of reality’, was committed throughout his career to exploring the dark side of human existence. The private collection of the foundation includes more than 2,500 items dedicated to Francis Bacon. At the heart of the Collection is a selection of Bacon’s paintings from the late 1920s to the early 1980s, along with artworks by peers and other key influences, as well as a large selection of graphic works covering Bacon’s oeuvre from 1966 to 1992. The foundation also includes quite a number of photographs of Bacon taken by leading photographers from the early 1940s to the early 1990s, as well as pictures taken by his friends, family and lovers. Artefacts once owned by the artist and found in his studios are also held in the collection and have been carefully chosen for their educational value. These unique items further illuminate us on his working methods, but also several rare items from Bacon’s interior designer period are part of this private collection.


Francis Bacon in Monaco

Bacon appears to have first visited the Principality of Monaco at the dawn of the 1940s. A letter, dated 3 June 1940, was sent to the artist in Monaco by his cousin, Diana Watson, informing him of his father’s death.

In 1946 Erica Brausen, then at the Redfern Gallery, met Bacon through a mutual friend, the painter Graham Sutherland, and purchased Painting 1946 from Bacon for £200. With the proceeds from the sale, Bacon immediately left London to settle in Monaco.

The Principality was to become Bacon’s main residence from July 1946 until the early 1950s. He first resided at the Hôtel Ré, where he lived with his lover and patron Eric Hall and his nanny, Jessie Lightfoot. Graham and Kathleen Sutherland were among the friends with whom he regularly spent time during his early years in Monaco.

Bacon was attracted by the atmosphere and lifestyle of Monte Carlo; he enjoyed the Mediterranean landscape and the invigorating sea air, which was beneficial for his asthma.

The Belle Époque casino with its highly sophisticated ambiance appealed to the artist, who was an inveterate gambler. In one of his interviews with David Sylvester he declared: “I remember when I lived once for a long time in Monte Carlo and I became very obsessed by the Casino and I spent whole days there […]”. Bacon was driven by the exhilarating highs and lows that gambling, like painting, procured. Gambling depended on the element of chance that was also inherent to his working process.

Despite many distractions, Bacon managed to produce work in the Principality. He perceived Monaco as: “[…] very good for pictures falling ready-made into the mind.” It was in Monaco that he began to concentrate on painting the human form, a crucial step in his work that set him on the path to becoming one of the leading figurative post-war artists. Bacon embarked there on his papal figures and his ‘Head’ series and also initiated new working practices.

Throughout his life Bacon returned regularly to the Principality where he could often be seen with his friends, his lovers and his sister. Café de Paris, Chatham Bar, Pulcinella and Le Pinocchio were among his favourite bars and restaurants. His last visit to Monaco took place in 1990, two years before his death.

https://www.mbartfoundation.com/francis-bacon-the-artist/bacon-in-monaco/



Reservation & information

Price on request. As we have only limited number of places, thank you for contacting us as per email at cotedazur@la-visite.eu