The first extended study of Frank Auerbach's remarkable portrait
drawings reveals their complexity and ambition as works of graphic art
This book offers an original approach to one of Britain's leading
artists: Frank Auerbach (b. 1931). It looks in detail at his portrait
drawings, which Auerbach has been making since the 1950s, and which he
has always considered important, freestanding works of art. By turns
eerie, shocking, enigmatic, and hauntingly tender, they demand fresh
interpretation and investigation. Reproducing more than 130 examples of
these portraits, some for the first time, and featuring new essays by
curators, scholars, and critics, this book provides an unprecedented
opportunity to explore and reassess these striking and sometimes
unsettling works of graphic art. Frank Auerbach: Drawings of People
includes texts by both the editors and the artist himself, and new
essays by Kate Aspinall, James Finch, Alex Massouras, David Mellor, and
Barnaby Wright.
Distributed for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art