Painter Frank Auerbach, who fled the Nazis and became a major artist,
dies at 93
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[November 13, 2024]
By JILL LAWLESS
LONDON (AP) — Frank Auerbach, who fled Nazi Germany for Britain as a
child and became one of the major artists of the 20th century, has died
at 93.
Auerbach’s gallery, Frankie Rossi Art Projects, said on Tuesday the
artist died at his home in London the day before.
Born in Berlin in 1931, Auerbach came to England in 1939 as one of six
children sponsored by the writer Iris Origo. It was part of a movement
known as the the Kindertransport that rescued thousands of Jewish
children from Nazi-occupied Europe in the months before World War II.
Auerbach was 7 and never saw his parents again. Both were killed in the
Auschwitz concentration camp.
“I’ve done this thing that psychiatrists disapprove of, which is
blocking things out,” Auerbach told the BBC eight decades later. “Life
is too short, in my case, to brood over the past.”
He attended a Quaker-run boarding school in England alongside other
refugees and war orphans, and after studies at St. Martin’s School of
Art and the Royal College of Art in London, he devoted his life to
painting.
He lived and worked in the same north London studio from 1954 until his
death and, according to his gallery, worked 364 days a year.
Along with the other “School of London” post-war artists including
Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud and Leon Kossoff, he focused on figurative
painting regardless of changing artistic fashions. Auerbach slathered
canvasses in thick layers of paint to produce near-abstract but
recognizable landscapes and brooding, occluded portraits.
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This undated photo provided by Pelham Communications on Tuesday,
Nov. 12, 2024 of Frank Auerbach. (David Dawson/Pelham Communications
via AP)
Auerbach told the BBC earlier this
year that the paintings' “eccentric thickness” was "an involuntary
byproduct of the fact that I went on and on and on and repainted the
whole image from top to bottom every time.”
“All art comes out of dissatisfaction," he said.
Auerbach exhibited his work from the 1950s but didn't gain fame for
another 20 years. His first retrospective exhibition was at London's
Hayward Gallery in 1978. He represented Britain at the 1986 Venice
Biennale, winning the Golden Lion top prize. His most recent
exhibition, Frank Auerbach: The Charcoal Heads, opened at London's
Courtauld Gallery in February.
In later life, his work commanded high prices. In 2023, “Mornington
Crescent” – one of many paintings inspired by the urban streets near
his home — sold at Sotheby’s for $7.1 million, a record for the
artist.
“We have lost a dear friend and remarkable artist but take comfort
knowing his voice will resonate for generations to come," said
Geoffrey Parton, director of Frankie Rossi Art Projects.
Auerbach is survived by his son, Jacob Auerbach.
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