Details
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- Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion
- 1944
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 44-01
- Oil and pastel on Sundeala board
- 94 cm × 74 cm (37 in × 29 in)
- Tate, London
- Based on the Eumenides—or Furies—of Aeschylus' The Oresteia, donated to the Tate in 1953 by Bacon's lover, Eric Hall. Bacon painted Second Version of Triptych 1944 in 1988.
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- Three Studies for a Crucifixion
- 1962
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 62-04
- Oil and sand on canvas
- 198.1 x 144.8cm (78 x 57 in)
- Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City
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- Three Figures in a Room 1964
- 1964
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 64-10
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147cm (78 x 58 in)
- Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris
- Has been described as Bacon's first "secular triptych".
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- Crucifixion (1965)
- 1965
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 65-01
- Oil on Canvas
- 197.2 cm × 147 cm (78 in × 58 in)
- Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich
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- Three Studies for a Portrait of Lucian Freud
- 1966
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 66-05
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 57 in)
- Private collection
- The first of three large triptychs depicting Lucian Freud. Freud also appears in Three Studies of Lucian Freud (1969) and Three Portraits: Posthumous Portrait of George Dyer, Self-portrait, and Portrait of Lucian Freud (1973). Freud was also the subject of numerous smaller portraits by Bacon.
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- Triptych Inspired by T.S Elliot's Poem "Sweeney Agoniste"
- 1967
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 67-16
- Oil and pastel on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78.25 x 57.25 in)
- Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
- Inspired by the poem Sweeney Agonistes by T. S. Eliot, first triptych to feature figures on a bed.
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- Two Figures Lying on a Bed with Attendants
- 1968
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 68-08
- Oil and pastel on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 57 in)
- Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, Tehran
- Purchased in 1972 by Farah Pahlavi, the wife of the last Shah of Iran for the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art. Remained in storage for nearly two decades before display at Tate Britain in 2004.[3]
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- Three Studies of Lucian Freud
- 1969
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 69-07
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 57 in)
- Private collection, USA
- The second of three large triptychs depicting Lucian Freud. Freud also appears in Three Studies for a Portrait of Lucian Freud (1966) and Three Portraits: Posthumous Portrait of George Dyer, Self-portrait, and Portrait of Lucian Freud (1973). Freud was also the subject of numerous smaller portraits by Bacon. Sold by Christie's in New York on 13 November 2013, at $142m (£89m), it became the most expensive artwork ever auctioned.[4]
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- Triptych – Studies from the Human Body (1970)
- 1970
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 70-04
- Oil and Dry Transfer Lettering on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- The Esther Grether Family Collection, Basel
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- Three Studies of the Male Back
- 1970
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 70-06
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Kunsthaus Zürich
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- Triptych – Studies of the Human Body (1970)
- 1970
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 70-09
- Oil on canvas
- 197 x 147.8cm (78 x 58.5 in)
- Private collection (Possibly owned by Jacques Hachuel, Paris)
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- Triptych 1970
- 1970
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 70-10
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- National Gallery of Australia, Canberra
- Purchased 1973, central panel features figures inspired by Eadweard Muybridge's photograph of wrestlers. Left and right panels feature Bacon's lover, George Dyer.[5]
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- In Memory of George Dyer
- 1971
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 71-09
- Oil and Dry Transfer Lettering on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Beyeler Foundation, Riehen, near Basel
- One of the three Black Triptychs (with Triptych–August 1972 and Triptych, May–June 1973) painted by Bacon following the death of his lover, George Dyer.
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- Three Studies of Figures on Beds
- 1972
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 72-01
- Oil and Pastel on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- The Esther Grether Family Collection, Basel
- The figures are inspired by Eadweard Muybridge's photographs of wrestlers
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- Triptych–August 1972
- 1972
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 72-07
- Oil and Sand on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5 cm
- Tate, London
- One of the three Black Triptych's (with In Memory of George Dyer and Triptych, May–June 1973), painted by Bacon following the death of his lover, George Dyer.
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- Three Portraits: Posthumous Portrait of George Dyer, Self-portrait, and Portrait of Lucian Freud
- 1973
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 73-01
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- The Esther Grether Family Collection, Basel
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- Triptych, May–June 1973
- 1973
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 73-03
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- The Esther Grether Family Collection, Basel
- One of the three "Black triptychs" (with Triptych – August 1972 and In Memory of George Dyer). Painted in memory of Dyer who committed suicide on the eve of Bacon's retrospective at Paris's Grand Palais, on 24 October 1971, the triptych is a portrait of the moments before Dyer's death from an overdose of pills in their hotel room.[6]
- Triptych, May–June 1973 was purchased at auction in 1989 by Swiss businesswoman Esther Grether for $6.3 million ($15.5 million as of 2023), then a record for a Bacon painting.[7] [8] [9] Grether is believed to own three other Bacon triptychs from the 1970s.
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- Triptych March 1974
- 1974
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 74-02
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Fundación Juan March, Madrid
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- Triptych 1976
- 1976
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 76-05
- Oil, Pastel and Dry Transfer Lettering on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection of Roman Abramovich
- Sold in May 2008 for $86.3 million ($122 million as of 2023), to Russian businessman Roman Abramovich, holds the record for the highest price paid for a post-war work of art at auction.[7][8]
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- Triptych 1974–1977
- 1974 (Altered in 1977)
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 77-05
- Oil and Dry Transfer Lettering on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection of Joe Lewis
- Features Bacon's lover George Dyer "writhing and struggling on a near-deserted beach watched by two disconcerting figures".[10] Sold in February 2008 to currency trader and businessman Joe Lewis for £26.3 million (£44.3 million as of 2023), then a record for postwar artwork bought in Europe.[7][8]
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- Triptych – Studies of the Human Body (1979)
- 1979
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 79-01
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection
- Central panel marks final appearance of figures inspired by wrestlers from the photographs of Muybridge. Sold by Stanley J. Seeger for $8.6m in 2001 ($14.8 million as of 2023), then a record price for a Bacon painting.[11][8]
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- Triptych Inspired by the Oresteia of Aeschylus
- 1981
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 81-03
- Oil on canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo
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- Triptych 1983
- 1983
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 83-07
- Oil, Pastel and Aerosol Paint on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection of Juan Abelló, Madrid.[12]
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- Three Studies for a Portrait of John Edwards
- 1984
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 84-05
- Oil and Aerosol Paint on Canvas
- 198.3 x 148cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection
- Features Bacon's companion and sole heir, John Edwards. Sold by Pierre Chen at Christie's in 2014 for $80.8 million.[13][14]
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- Study for a Self-Portrait—Triptych, 1985–86
- 1985-1986
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 86-02
- Oil and Aerosol Paint on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private Collection
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- Triptych 1986-87
- 1986-1987
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 87-01
- Oil, Pastel, Aerosol Paint and Dry Transfer Lettering on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection, Switzerland
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- Triptych 1987
- 1987
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 87-05
- Oil, Pastel and Aerosol Paint on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Private collection, The Estate of Francis Bacon
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- Second Version of Triptych 1944
- 1988
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 88-05
- Oil and Aerosol Paint on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 58 in)
- Tate, London
- The second version of Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion (1944). Painted by Bacon after the 1944 triptych was deemed too fragile to travel to New York for an exhibition.
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- Triptych 1991
- 1991
- Catalogue Raisonné Number 91-02
- Oil and Aerosol Paint on Canvas
- 198 x 147.5cm (78 x 57 in)
- Museum of Modern Art, New York City
- Bacon's last triptych, features formula one driver Ayrton Senna, José Capelo,[15] as well as a self-portrait of Bacon.
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