Lucian Freud
Sheet 57.0 x 53.0 cm
Further images
Ib relates to a painting of the same sitter, made in 1983–84 immediately before Freud began work on the etching. (Freud drew into the plate from life and so the printed image reversed the composition of the painting.) The two works are almost the same size, and this suggests the importance of scale in Freud’s sense of composition; the size of a composition was appropriate to its relative grandeur or intimacy. In this picture, the slumbering form of the artist’s daughter suggested a more intimate scale. Her head rests on the arm of a sofa. Half of her fringe is pushed upwards and away from her eyes, and the other side of the fringe is tucked neatly behind her ear. A strong artificial light overhead illuminates her face and her profile casts a narrow area of shadow on the sofa.
Isobel (‘Ib’) Boyt (b. 1961) was Lucian Freud and Suzy Boyt’s daughter. She sat for several paintings by her father including Ib (1990), Ib and her Husband (1992) and Ib Reading (1997). When interviewed in 2004, Isobel Boyt explained that sitting for Freud was ‘a way of having a relationship with my dad’.
Ib was published in 1986 by James Kirkman in London and Brooke Alexander in New York. It was printed by Terry Wilson at Palm Tree Studios, London.
Provenance
Private Collection, given by the artistLiterature
Nicholas Penny and Robert Flynn Johnson, Lucian Freud: works on paper, Thames & Hudson, 1988, p. 110, pl. 85 (illus.)
Lucian Freud: The Complete Etchings 1946–1991, exh. cat., Thomas Gibson Fine Art, 1991, cat. no. 19 (illus.) (another impression)
Craig Hartley, The Etchings of Lucian Freud: A Catalogue Raisonné, 1946–1999, Marlborough Graphics/Galleria Ceribelli, 1995, cat. no. 22 (illus.) (another impression)
Bruce Bernard and Derek Birdsall, eds., Lucian Freud, Jonathan Cape, 1996, pl. 188 (illus.) (another impression)
Starr Figura, Lucian Freud: The Painter's Etchings, exh. cat., Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2007, pp. 56, 135, pl. 25 (illus.) (another impression)