يحاول ذهب - حر
The work Supremely modern art made with fury for life
November 13, 2024
|The Guardian
When I found out Frank Auerbach was dead, I thought once more of the heartbreaking story of his parents, Max Auerbach and Charlotte Nora Borchardt, who saved his life by putting their child on a train from Berlin to London in 1939.
Auerbach told his friend William Feaver they packed things he would need in his future life, including linen for when he married. They knew they would never see him grow up, or be there for any of his future. They believed they would soon die. And they did, in the Holocaust of Europe's Jews. What a future they missed. The son they saved became one of the greatest British artists of modern times who painted with a fury for life and a gravitas of grief, as if his lust and sorrow were fighting it out in each mighty brushstroke. Slashes of red or black streak across a pair of mid-period canvases, bringing savage bolts of lightning to a lime parkland or a grey heath in violent pastoral scenes that make a spring day seem like pure agony.
And that's in his mature art, when he was more reconciled to life and the healing act of painting itself. In his devastating early work the wound is wide open. In the late 1950s and early 60s as London was rebuilt after the blitz and bombsites became shiny new shops and cinemas, he painted a series of resolutely un-swinging building-site scenes. Instead of seeing these busy locations as optimistic signs of renewal, he paints them as holes in the world. Girders feebly raised into the sky are dwarfed by the swarming, cavernous voids dug out of the bomb-blasted 20th-century soil. You can't resist the power of these paintings, or doubt for a second that they speak of the lost, the destroyed, the murdered. Auerbach simply refuses to join in the fun as a new consumer society prepares to forget and move on. He's stuck in the mud.
هذه القصة من طبعة November 13, 2024 من The Guardian.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Guardian
The Guardian
Kremlin says Putin invited to join Trump's 'board of peace'
The Kremlin announced yesterday that Vladimir Putin has been invited to join Donald Trump’s “board of peace”, set up last week with the intention that it would oversee a ceasefire in Gaza.
2 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Paying the penalty Díaz's failed Panenka proves a cruel lesson
After Portugal had beaten England in the World Cup quarterfinal in 2006, Cristiano Ronaldo was asked how he had looked so calm taking his penalty in the shootout when England’s players appeared crushed by the occasion.
3 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
PM makes the error that the world can reason with an entirely unreasonable president
Toady, or not toady?
2 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Arresting supporters of Palestine Action is censorship - US official
Arresting supporters of Palestine Action is “censoring” their free speech and “does more harm than good”, a Trump administration official has said.
1 min
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Djokovic feels the love as he chases history
Relishing his role as the tour's elder statesman, the Serb madea dazzling start to his bid fora 25th grand slam title
2 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Prostate becomes most common cancer in UK
Prostate cancer is now the most commonly diagnosed form of the disease across the UK, surpassing breast cancer, according to a leading charity.
2 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Keeping their words
Restoring a language in Lesotho
3 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Industry Leaders urge politicians to stand firm
European industry has hit back at Donald Trump's “ludicrous demands” to hand over Greenland or face a trade war.
2 mins
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
BMI should not be key to child eating disorder diagnosis - NHS
Achild’s body mass index should not be the main factor when deciding which under-18s get help for an eating disorder, the NHS has told health professionals.
1 min
January 20, 2026
The Guardian
Government stalls Hillsborough law amendment after families' criticisms
Labour will not bring the Hillsborough law back to the Commons for debate until it can reach agreement with the families, the Guardian understands.
2 mins
January 20, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

