The Wick List

Viewing Lucian Freud: New Perspectives

To mark the centenary of Lucian Freud’s birth, the National Gallery is staging the largest exhibition of his paintings in a decade. For curator Daniel F. Herrmann, it is an opportunity to shed new light on Freud’s artistic development and unwavering commitment to the medium of painting. ‘His practice has often been overshadowed by biography and celebrity,’ he says. ‘In this exhibition we offer new perspectives on the artist’s work looking closely at the contexts in which it developed.’

Spanning his seven-decade career, it brings together more than 65 works, from his intimate early pictures to his celebrated large-scale canvases of powerful individuals and nudes. Highlights include a portrait of the late Queen Elizabeth II, on loan from the Royal Collection, a large-scale naked portrait of the benefits supervisor Sue Tilly, and an unsettling portrait of a woman with a daffodil from 1945.

Organised chronologically in five thematic sections, it reveals the astonishing range of Freud’s work and influences. ‘I want people really to engage in slow looking with these paintings and find the joy in working out how they operate,’ Herrmann told the Evening Standard ahead of the opening. We can certainly get on board with that.

Share story
Dates
01 October 2022 — 22 January 2023
READ MORE
The Wick Culture - David Bowie, Debbie Doss, Hammersmith 1973. Courtesy of Lightroom
The Wick List

Viewing David Bowie: You're Not Alone

The Wick Culture - Viewing Lucian Freud: New Perspectives
The Wick List

Viewing Collect Art Fair

The Wick Culture - Credit: Musée de la Vie Romantique
The Wick List

Viewing Museum of Romantic Life

The Wick Culture - Emilija Škarnulytė, Hypoxia, 2023 (detail), For All At Last Return, Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art, Gateshead. Photo: Colin Davison © 2025 Baltic
The Wick List

Viewing For All At Last Return

The Wick Culture - Wayne Thiebaud. Boston Cremes (1962) © Wayne Thiebaud. Courtesy of Crocker Art Museum
The Wick List

Viewing Wayne Thiebaud: American Still Life

The Wick Culture - Nan Goldin.
Mark in the red car, Lexington, Mass.
(1979) from “The Ballad of Sexual Dependency,” 
© Nan Goldin.
Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian
The Wick List

Viewing Richard Avedon: Facing West & Nan Goldin: The Ballad of Sexual Dependency