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every portrait is a bit like a love affair,
I mean, it’s a very intimate thing
- Maggi Hambling
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Maggi Hambling & Sarah Lucas
Artists Maggi Hambling and Sarah Lucas were first introduced to each other by their mutual friend, Sebastian Horsley, at the Colony Room in 2005. The two formidable artists remain friends, today, and have inspired each other in their compelling works.
Hambling's portrait, ‘Sarah Lucas II’ captures the conceptual artist in the frame, who presides over a composition of diverse elements that appear as allusions to her own work. The egg, shoe, banana, and soft sculptures, to name a few, are all executed within a wonderful movement and waves of paint. Hambling's portrait reveals a true sensitivity to Sarah Lucas and her artistic achievements.
Hambling explains, ‘A portrait is made with the eye, the hand and the heart. And the most important is the heart.’ Hambling’s unending adventure using oil paint allows her to create compassionate and incisive works that are visceral, serious and witty – revealing the human condition. This work is a celebration of portraiture and its ongoing possibilities which have been a fundamental part of Hambling’s practice since the beginning of her artistic career.
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Maggi HamblingSarah Lucas II, 2013Oil on canvas152.4 x 121.9 cm
(60 x 48 inches) -
Oil paint is one of my favourite things, this
stuff, in this tube, this sexy stuff which is
alive itself, is what I live with and battle with
every day
- Maggi Hambling
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Maggi HamblingSebastian Horsley X, 2011Oil on canvas30.5 x 25.4 cm
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Henrietta MOREAS was a force of nature, you
know, she was named as the queen of Soho
- Maggi Hambling
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Maggi HamblingHenrietta Mask, 1999Oil on wood53 x 54 cm
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Maggi Hambling & Henrietta Moraes
Henrietta Moraes, also known as ‘Hen’, was the muse for many artists including Lucien Freud, Francis Bacon and later Maggi Hambling.
Infamous for her hedonistic lifestyle, she became a fixture at the Colony Room Club. It wasn’t until much later in Moraes’ life that she struck up a passionate and artistic relationship with Maggi Hambling – posing for the artist most Monday’s in her final seven months.
Hambling explains, ‘Henrietta was one of the people I went on painting after she died, as with George Melly [another friend], as with my father. It is a habit of mine to go on making portraits of them, because if you’ve loved someone, the person goes on being alive inside us all. It is where artists are lucky, because they have a positive way of grieving, it is ironic, of course, because you are trying to make a portrait with as much life as possible of someone who is dead.’
Moraes’ gaze almost pierces the viewer’s soul as Hambling poetically captures the essence of her lost lover.
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Experiment. Experiment. Experiment.
- Maggi Hambling
Maggi Hambling: Artist in Focus
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