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Francis Bacon Metropolitan Museum of Art
"This museum is a torpedo moving through time, its head the ever-advancing present, its tail the ever-receding past of 50 to 100 years ago."
Alfred H. Barr Jr.
Metropolitan Museum of Art exemplifies many of the key themes and stylistic choices that define Bacon’s unsettling, psychologically intense body of work. In the 1975 lithograph, Bacon creates an eerie and ambiguous atmosphere by juxtaposing distorted human forms, abstracted settings, and unsettling portraits. The tension in the painting arises from the contrast between the fragmented, organic forms of the figures and the geometric, stage-like setting in which they are placed, as well as the psychological unease conveyed through the interaction of the subjects.
The setting evokes a sense of confinement and isolation. The figures are positioned on a circular, stage-like platform that tilts toward the viewer, a device Bacon often employed to give a sense of spatial distortion and psychological unease. This artificial, isolated environment feels disconnected from any natural context, intensifying the sense that the figures are trapped within their own psychological or existential spaces.
At its core, Metropolitan Museum of Art (1975) is a meditation on the themes of human suffering, isolation, and the fractured self. Bacon’s use of distortion and fragmentation reflects his view of the human condition as one of inherent instability and chaos. The figures, caught in their contorted, almost violent poses, symbolise the internal and external forces that shape human existence—the body as both a vessel of experience and a site of struggle.
The background of the work is divided into three distinct sections: a dark, central void, flanked by two eerie, almost cartoonish portraits of men in suits. These portraits, with their elongated and exaggerated facial features, are presented in a somewhat detached manner, as if they are on display or observing the scene from a distance. The stark contrast between the empty, black void at the centre and the pale, caricatured faces to either side creates an unnerving effect, as if the figures within the setting are being judged or watched by these ghostly onlookers.
The setting also evokes a sense of theatricality or display. The tilted stage and spotlight-like lighting isolate the figures and emphasise their distorted forms, much like exhibits in a gallery or actors on a stage. This heightens the tension between exposure and alienation, themes Bacon often explored in his work. The viewer becomes complicit in this spectacle of distorted humanity, forced to confront the rawness and brutality of Bacon’s vision.
At the heart of the work, the distorted, fleshy figure kneeling on the circular platform is typical of Bacon’s treatment of the human form. The body is twisted and malformed, with exaggerated musculature and unnatural contortions. It appears to be writhing in pain or exertion, captured in a moment of intense physical strain. The figure’s head is turned downward, its back and limbs contorted in such a way that it is difficult to discern the precise nature of the body’s movement or the emotions it is meant to convey. This ambiguity adds to the overall sense of tension and discomfort in the painting.
Bacon’s frequent reduction of the human body to a series of abstract shapes and raw flesh is fully evident here. The body’s physicality is emphasised, yet it is also dehumanised, reduced to a mere form. This fragmentation reflects Bacon’s preoccupation with the fragility and impermanence of the human body. The figure seems caught in a perpetual struggle, a physical manifestation of existential suffering and vulnerability.
In the foreground, another figure, more amorphous and less discernible, lies prone on the edge of the stage. This figure appears less human, almost animalistic, with a head that resembles a distorted mask or an amorphous blob with eyes. The contrast between the kneeling figure and this passive, almost defeated form adds to the tension in the painting. This prone figure seems both at odds with and connected to the central figure, creating a narrative of struggle and submission that is left unresolved.
The two portraits on either side of the scene serve as silent observers of the figures in the middle. Their gaze, though ambiguous and emotionless, seems to penetrate the central space, adding to the feeling of surveillance and judgement. The viewers of the painting, in turn, take on the role of voyeurs, invited to witness the contorted figures in their vulnerable, distorted states. Bacon frequently explored this tension between being observed and exposed, often portraying his figures in compromising or distressing positions, as though they are on display for judgement or pity.
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