On Francis Bacon: Annalyn Swan and Mark Stevens with Fintan O'Toole

Thu. Apr 15, 2021 8:00pm - 9:00pm EDT
All Ages
All Ages
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Event Description

The Pulitzer Prize–winning authors discuss their biography of painter Francis Bacon, the first comprehensive survey of his life and work.


Francis Bacon played an outsized role in both 20th–century art and life—from his public emergence with his legendary Triptych in 1944 and throughout the rest of his life. Whether hanging out in London, Paris, or Tangier, Bacon was a free spirit and openly gay at a time when many others remained closeted—his exploits were as unforgettable as his images. Through hundreds of interviews, and extensive research, Swan and Steven probe Bacon's life from his childhood in Ireland to his death in Madrid, and his career from his early days in design to his improbable late emergence onto the international stage as one of the great visionaries of the twentieth century.

Annalyn Swan and Mark Stevens discuss Francis Bacon: Revelations, a biography more than a decade in the making.

This program will be streamed on the NYPL event page.


ACCESSIBILITY NOTES
A live transcript will be provided. ASL interpretation is available upon request. Please submit your request at least two weeks in advance by emailing accessibility@nypl.org. A pre-filled Gmail template is available by clicking hereAny media will be accompanied by alt text to reference before the program or by audio description.

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Annalyn Swan is the former arts editor of Newsweek and an award–winning music critic. She teaches biography at the Graduate Center of CUNY as well as at the Middlebury Bread Loaf School of English. Stevens and Swan won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for their biography, de Kooning: An American Master. They live in New York.


Mark Stevens is the former art critic of New York Magazine. He has been the art critic for The New Republic and Newsweek and has also written for The New YorkerVanity Fair, and The New York Times.


Fintan O'Toole is an Irish writer. He is a columnist with the Irish Times, a regular contributor to the New York Review of Books and Leonard L. Milberg visiting lecturer in Irish Letters at Princeton. He has won the Orwell Prize for Journalism and the European Press Prize. His most recent book is The Politics of Pain: Postwar England and the Rise of Nationalism. We Don't Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Modern Ireland will be published in 2022.


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PUBLIC NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
This Program uses a third-party website link. By clicking on the third-party website link, you will leave NYPL’s website and enter a website not operated by NYPL. We encourage you to review the privacy policies of every third-party website or service that you visit or use, including those third parties with whom you interact with through our Library services. For more information about these third-party links, please see the section of NYPL's Privacy Policy describing "Third-Party Library Services Providers" at https://www.nypl.org/help/about-nypl/legal-notices/privacy-policy.


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Annalyn Swan © Elena Seibert
Mark Stevens © Elena Seibert

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