The Daily Telegraph

Ministers intervene to keep Bacon’s earliest works in UK

- By Phoebe Southworth

MINISTERS have stepped in to keep four rare early works by Francis Bacon, worth £3 million, in the UK.

A painted screen valued at £2.5 million, believed to be the figurative painter’s earliest-surviving large-scale work and his earliest-surviving figure painting, is one of the items being blocked from export.

The screen was completed at the start of Bacon’s career around 1930 and was his first work in triptych, in which a picture or relief is carved on three panels, attached and usually presented as an altarpiece.

The other items placed under an export bar are three rugs that were sold separately at auction, each considered among the finest modernist carpets in existence and described as “rare survivals of a very limited production of a group of rug designs” by Bacon.

The rugs are valued at between £146,000 and £186,000.

Michael Ellis, the arts minister, said: “Francis Bacon is one of our most respected and renowned artists whose works had a huge influence on modern art. It is right that we try to keep these outstandin­g works in this country, where they could inspire our next generation of world-class artists.”

Experts on the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA) recommende­d that the works be kept in Britain because of their “outstandin­g aesthetic importance” as well as their value to the study of Bacon.

Born in Dublin, Ireland, to British parents, Bacon took up painting in his 20s and went on to become a worldleadi­ng artist and one of the most prominent of the 20th century. RCEWA member Richard Calvocores­si said: “Given how much of his work Bacon destroyed, it is crucial that we try to retain these rare early examples in this country.

“Bacon’s first short career as an interior designer, principall­y of modernist furniture and rugs, informed so much of his later painting – not least his feeling for space and structure.”

A decision on the export ban will be made in July and may be extended if a serious intention to raise funds to purchase the items is made at the recommende­d price for each item.

 ??  ?? The painted triptych screen by Bacon, valued at £2.5m, was completed around 1930
The painted triptych screen by Bacon, valued at £2.5m, was completed around 1930

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