Portrait of Francis Bacon (Lucian Freud)
by Lucian Freud

A small oil painting by Lucian Freud depicting his friend and fellow painter Francis Bacon, stolen from the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin in 1988. One of two known portraits Freud painted of Bacon, and a key document of their intense artistic friendship.
Confidence Map
Each section of this reconstruction is graded by the strength of its supporting evidence. Hover over a section to learn why.
General Description
highA small oil painting by Lucian Freud depicting his friend and fellow painter Francis Bacon, stolen from the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin in 1988. One of two known portraits Freud painted of Bacon, a...
Based on 3 cited source(s) and overall exhibit confidence of 80%.
Historical Context
highFreud and Bacon met in the late 1940s and maintained an intense, competitive friendship that shaped British figurative painting. Freud painted Bacon twice; this small portrait from 1952 captured Bacon...
Supported by multiple scholarly references.
Circumstances of Loss
mediumStolen from the Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, during a Freud exhibition; never recovered
Loss date is documented, lending credibility to the account.
The Story of Loss
Cause: Stolen from the Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin, during a Freud exhibition; never recovered
Circumstances: Stolen from the Neue Nationalgalerie during a Lucian Freud exhibition in 1988. The small size of the painting made it easy to conceal. Despite international searches and its placement on stolen art databases, the painting has never been recovered or offered for sale.
Date of loss: 1988
Historical Context
Freud and Bacon met in the late 1940s and maintained an intense, competitive friendship that shaped British figurative painting. Freud painted Bacon twice; this small portrait from 1952 captured Bacon with characteristic directness — eyes averted, jaw set, an expression of guarded intensity. The painting was lent to the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin for a 1988 Freud retrospective. During the exhibition, it was stolen in circumstances that have never been fully explained. Given the painting's small size (roughly 18 × 13 cm), it could be concealed easily. As both Freud and Bacon became among the most expensive painters in auction history — Bacon's triptych sold for $142 million in 2013 — the missing portrait's value has risen enormously, making it too recognisable to sell openly.
Reconstruction Methodology
This exhibit's reconstruction was generated using AI analysis of historical records, scholarly references, and contextual evidence from the 1952 period. Each section of the reconstruction is tagged with a confidence level reflecting the strength of the underlying evidence.
Vestige reconstructions are scholarly tools, not definitive claims. They represent our best understanding given available evidence and are always presented with transparent methodology.
Cited Sources
- 1
Lucian Freud
William Feaver (2019)
- 2
Freud at Work: Photographs by Bruce Bernard and David Dawson
Bruce Bernard (2006)
- 3
Francis Bacon and the Loss of Self
Ernst van Alphen (1992)