Frank Auerbach 1931-2024
This vibrant landscape is one of a number by the artist depicting Mornington Crescent, the area in Camden Town, north London, where he has lived and worked in a studio since 1954, when it was vacated by his artist friend and contemporary Leon Kossoff (and before him the German-Jewish artist Gustav Metzger). It is painted with the distinctive heavy impasto which characterises Auerbach’s work. In his portraits and nudes, as well as urban landscapes, Auerbach frequently returns to the same subject. Here, using a lively yellow and blue palette that contrasts with the earthy tones of his earlier urban scenes, he transforms the choking London traffic into a vigorous surge of pigment. The date ‘2004’ scratched into the paintwork suggests the urgency and transience of both life and art.
A German-Jewish émigré with a focus on a particular ‘home’ location and a ‘family’ of familiar sitters, Auerbach’s work has a particular resonance for the exploration of issues of identity and migration. As Auerbach himself has commented of his background: ‘I wasn’t British born, […] I didn’t have a family and I didn’t have anything to anchor me to whatever was going on’. Mornington Crescent, Summer Morning II combines the artist’s focus on familiar architectural structures together with a sense of place. Auerbach deliberately restricts his landscape motifs, concentrating especially on London locations and foregrounding the area around his studio and its distinctive features, which include the landmark chimney.
This painting was acquired in 2006 to fill a longstanding gap in the Ben Uri collection and has since been exhibited on numerous occasions including for the day at Surrey Street Primary School, Luton, in the initiative ‘Your Paintings: Masterpieces in Schools’, in association with BBC & The Public Catalogue Foundation in October 2013 and featured on ‘Front Row’, BBC Radio 4.
Provenance
Acquired for the Ben Uri Collection in 2006 through the support and generosity of the Art Fund, MLA/V&A Purchase Grant Fund, Daniel and Pauline Auerbach, Frank Auerbach and Marlborough Fine Art LondonExhibitions
2006 Recent Acquisitions 2001-2006, Ben Uri Gallery - The London Jewish Museum of Art
2007 London Senses and Experiences: Art in the Big City - Michael Andrews, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud, Ron Kitaj, Leon Kossoff, Euan Uglow, Ben Uri Gallery - The London Jewish Museum of Art
2010 Apocalypse: unveiling a lost masterpiece by Marc Chagall and 50 selected masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection, Osborne Samuel
2012 Chaim Soutine and his Contemporaries - from Russia to Paris and School of London works from the Ben Uri Collection, Ben Uri Gallery
2013 Selected Highlights from over 200 works acquired during 2003-2013, Ben Uri Art Gallery
2015 Out of Chaos – Ben Uri: 100 Years in London, Somerset House
2016 Unexpected: continuing narratives of identity and migration, Ben Uri Gallery
2016 100 for 100: Ben Uri Past, Present & Future, Christie's South Kensington
2017 Refugees: The Lives of Others - German Refugee Artists to the UK, Ben Uri Gallery and Museum
2017 The Poetry of the Real, Beaux Arts Gallery
2018 Exodus: masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection, Bushey Museum
2018 Acquisitions and Long-Term Loan Highlights Since 2001, Ben Uri Gallery
2019 Architecture of London, Guildhall Art Gallery
2022 Fruits of the Spirit: Art from the Heart (online exhibition), National Gallery
2023 Joy, Ben Uri Gallery
2023 Art, Identity, Migration - Ben Uri at the London Art Fair, Business Design Centre
2023 Horizons: Histories and Futures of Migration, Germanischen Nationalmuseum
Literature
Rachel Dickson and Sarah MacDougall, eds., 'Out of Chaos: Ben Uri; 100 Years in London' (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2015) pp. 136-137;Sarah MacDougall, ed., 'No Set Rules: A Century of Selected Works from the Schlee Collection, Southampton, and the Ben Uri Collection, London' (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2015), p. 24, illus.;
Selected Highlights from over 200 works acquired during 2003-2013 (London, Ben Uri Gallery, 2013), illus.;
Oil Paintings in Public Ownership in Camden (London: The Public Catalogue Foundation, 2013), p. 6, illus;
Apocalypse: Unveiling a lost masterpiece by Marc Chagall (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2010);
David Glasser, 'London Senses and Experiences' (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2007), p.10, illus;
David Glasser, intro., 'Recent Acquisitions 2001-2006' (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2006) p. 6, illus.