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Triptych August 1972 (left panel) - Signed Print by Francis Bacon 1972 - MyArtBroker

Triptych August 1972 (left panel)
Signed Print

Francis Bacon

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61 x 49cm, Edition of 180, Lithograph

Medium: Lithograph

Edition size: 180

Year: 1972

Size: H 61cm x W 49cm

Signed: Yes

Format: Signed Print

Last Auction: October 2021

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Auction Results

Auction Date
Auction House
Location
Return to Seller
Hammer Price
Buyer Paid
October 2021
Artcurial
France
$7,000
$8,500
$10,500
June 2018
Chiswick Auctions
United Kingdom
June 2017
Phillips London
United Kingdom
MyPortfolio
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The value of Francis Bacon's Triptych August 1972 (left panel) (signed) is estimated to be worth between £6,000 and £9,000. This lithograph print, created in 1972, has an auction history of three total sales since its entry to the market on 6th June 2017. Over the past five years, the average annual growth rate of this work is 2% and the hammer price has ranged from £4,200 in August 2020 to £4,500 in February 2021. The edition size of this artwork is limited to 180.

Created with Highcharts 11.4.8Jun 2017Mar 2018Nov 2018Aug 2019May 2020Jan 2021Oct 2021$5,000$6,000$7,000$8,000$9,000$10,000$11,000$12,000© MyArtBroker

Meaning & Analysis

Created in the year following the death of George Dyer, Triptych August 1972 is an homage to Bacon's longing and regret for the loss of his lover and companion. Triptych August 1972 (left panel) pictures Dyer, Bacon's longstanding muse, fading away into a pitiable nothingness. Bacon met Dyer at the end of 1963 in one of Soho's pubs, and the pair's lives became instantly intertwined. Born into a family of organised crime and debauchery, Dyer was a troubled gang-associated man who, unsurprisingly, piqued the interest of Bacon's psychologically penetrative imagination. Throughout their tumultuous relationship, Bacon painted Dyer numerous times, but Triptych August 1972 (left panel) betrays Bacon's grief after Dyer's untimely death. Just one day before Bacon's solo show at Paris' Grand Palais in October 1971, Dyer's body was discovered slumped over the toilet of his hotel suite.

Unlike Bacon's solid form in Triptych August 1972 (right panel), Dyer's torso seems to fade to black, disappearing into the foreboding void behind him. To the left of his figure, a fleshy pool cascades down the legs of the chair, almost like a shadow composed of his corpse. The work is revealing of Bacon's animalistic handling of the human body, leaving little room for spirituality to convey the gruesome reality of death. In the right panel of the triptych, a similar fleshy shadow is attached to Bacon's figure, perhaps signalling the lingering pain of the love which tied the pair together beyond death. Dyer's eyelids appear sealed shut with his head turned towards the centre and right panels, almost like a quiet resignation to his fate. As lover, companion, and muse, Dyer's life was marred by constant expectation which, despite his unrelenting devotion to Bacon, eventually led him to the ever-present shadow of death this work represents. Much like its companion panels, Triptych August 1972 (left panel) is thus one of Bacon's most psychologically poignant and immersive works, relaying the artist's loss, grief, and guilt during this cataclysmic year of his life.

  • Irish-born artist, Francis Bacon, has produced some of the most famous paintings in the British Contemporary canon. The 20th century maverick's visceral and emotionally charged canvases redefined figurative art. Exploring harrowing themes of trauma, sexuality, religion and violence, Bacon forces the viewer to confront the human psyche and the dark realities of human emotion. Often working from memory or his own imagination, there is a clear morphing of influences on Bacon’s work. An unusual combination of imagery is the result of his exposure to canonical artists such as Velazquez, Picasso and Rembrandt alongside his exploration of medical textbooks and photographic stills.

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