Frank Auerbach: The Charcoal Heads at The Courtauld review
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Frank Auerbach produced an astonishing series of charcoal portraits and oil paintings. On display for the first time as a comprehensive collection at The Courtauld Gallery, The Charcoal Heads is a sequence of large-scale drawings and oil paintings tethered to a formative period of Auerbach’s career. They reveal the broken resilience of post-war Britain, with a spectral presence that make the viewer deeply aware of the relationship between artist and subject.
Frank Auerbach (b.1931), Head of EOW, 1956 Charcoal and chalk on paper. Private Collection © the artist, courtesy of Frankie Rossi Art Projects, London.
As London emerged from the devastation of the Second World War, Auerbach captured the essence of a city and its people rebuilding from the ground up. In sessions that went on for weeks – and in some cases, many months – in his Mornington Crescent studio, Auerbach drew his subjects again and again. He erased and reworked each portrait on the same piece of paper. The monumental results show the visible marks of his labour, with canvases scratched through and patched over, and surfaces scuffed and burnished by the repeated rubbing and removal of charcoal lines with an eraser.
These marks and abrasions are integral to each work: through consistent redrawing, Auerbach creates an extraordinary depth of feeling. Tellingly, he spoke of the importance of working repeatedly with the same subject: ‘to paint the same head over and over leads to unfamiliarity; eventually you get near the raw truth about it’.
The portraits are both present and absent, intimate yet hauntingly unfamiliar. His spectral heads fill every frame with an arresting physicality: the crevassed terrain of a shoulder emerges from the shadow as a sloping forehead disappear into darkness. Unusually for the time, Auerbach considered his drawings to be of equal status to his paintings. These are not the quick, preliminary sketches carried out by an artist before they move on to the final form, they are deliberate, committed works intent on capturing the essence and complexity of each subject.
Frank Auerbach The Charcoal Heads at The Courtauld Gallery. Installation View. Photo Fergus Carmichael.
The intensive process of creation, erasure and recreation gives the viewer a glimpse of the close relationship he held with his models. Despite the monochrome palette, each portrait bursts with life. The same subjects feature repeatedly, including Auerbach’s friend and contemporary Leon Kossof, his cousin Gerda Boehm and partner Stella West (identified by the initials E.O.W). West was Auberbach’s most enduring subject, and by 1960 he had completed ten charcoal portraits of her.
The oil paintings that sit alongside the charcoal drawings are equally complex. At times, Auerbach applied paint directly from the tube onto the canvas, and again uses his form to establish a visible process of creation. The paint is viscous, sitting in textured layers to the point where it becomes three-dimensional. His paintings of Kossof, produced before he moved on to charcoal drawings of his friend, depict a huge, swollen cranium with sunken eye sockets. Auerbach has created visible depth, with light and shadow manipulated to an almost tangible effect.
One of the final charcoal portraits created by Auerbach during this period is of a friend of his partner, Hellen Gillespie. It is one of the only drawings exhibited that includes colour. Against the black and white bold lines of red jump out, perhaps capturing a moment of intense emotion.
In the Charcoal Heads Auerbach is pushing at the boundaries of drawing and creation, a theme which has sustained him for well over three decades as an artist. The portraits are visceral, hauntingly beautiful works that convey the depths of human experience. The series is small, but well worth a visit – these are images that will stay with you long beyond the walls of the Courtauld.
Frank Auerbach: The Charcoal Heads is at The Courtauld Institute, London, until 27 May.
Location: The Courtauld Gallery, Somerset House, Strand, London WC2R 0RN. Price: from £14. Concessions available. Book now.
Words by Ellen Hodgetts
Nestled in the heart of New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s current exhibition, The Face of Life: Modern Portraits, features 80 portraits that capture the rapid transformations and shifting identities of the 20th century. The exhibited artists include Marsden Hartley, Gino Severini, Otto Dix, Max Beckmann, Leonora Carrington, Elizabeth Catlett, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, René Magritte, Henri Matisse, Joan Miró, and others…
Pierre Huyghe at the Fondation Beyeler, Switzerland, is on view until 13 September 2026…
Hospital Rooms is celebrating its 10th anniversary by launching a special public sale of limited-edition contemporary art posters, with funds supporting the charity’s work transforming NHS mental health hospitals across the UK. The 10 Posters for 10 Years campaign features artwork created by some of the world’s leading contemporary artists, including Jeremy Deller, Antony Gormley, Beatriz Milhazes, Yinka Shonibare, Anish Kapoor, and Grayson Perry…
Jemma Appleby has been announced as the winner of the prestigious £35,000 Charles Wollaston Award at the Royal Academy of Arts’ Summer Exhibition 2026…
Gallery view of the Summer Exhibition at Royal Academy of Arts.Photo: © David Parry/ Royal Academy of Arts
FLO London spoke with Chris McCabe, Head of the National Poetry Library and the programmer behind many of the festival's events, to hear his thoughts on the evolution of poetry, platforming young poets, and celebrating the life and legacy of poet Benjamin Zephaniah.
With new openings and seasonal menus across the capital, July is the perfect time to explore London’s restaurant scene. From Italian favourites and Lebanese cooking to Japanese dining and neighbourhood wine bars, here are seven restaurants we think should be on your list this month…
Newly opened in Notting Hill, KINZ is quickly gaining attention for its warm Lebanese hospitality, striking setting in a restored former bank building and, well-executed cooking…
The neighbourhood of Queen’s Park gained a gem of a restaurant when Italian restaurant Casa Felicia opened in October 2025 on the bustling Salusbury Road, the main artery of this delightful neighbourhood.
Anastasia Blackman is a Ukrainian-born American artist based in London…
Lucy Ash is a British-Canadian artist whose work is concerned with creating visibility and shifting perception of the LGBTIQ+ community. Lucy’s practice is to develop a series of paintings at a time, enabling an in-depth exploration around specific themes…
London enters a peak season of cultural activity in July , with festivals, live music, sport, exhibitions and outdoor events taking place across the capital…
A major exhibition of British sculptor Lynn Chadwick has opened at Houghton Hall in Norfolk. Presenting over 30 works, this is the largest show of the artist in over two decades. It has been curated by Pangolin London and we speak with Gallery Director Polly Bielecka to learn more…
The Courtauld Gallery, opens the first exhibition devoted to Barbara Hepworth’s lifelong fascination with colour. Alexandra reviews the landmark show…
James Turrell’s largest Skyspace ever created within a museum has opened at ARoS Aarhus Art Museum in Aarhus, Denmark…
Every summer, Shakespeare in the Squares embarks on a tour of London’s garden squares to bring one of the Bard’s iconic plays to life. Now in its tenth year, its 2026 production of ‘Love’s Labour’s Lost’ is a joyful celebration of music, storytelling and community…
Zurich Art Weekend returns from 12–14 June 2026, bringing together more than 70 museums, galleries, foundations and independent art spaces across the city…
London Gallery Weekend returns from 5–7 June 2026 for its sixth edition, bringing together 120 galleries across the capital for three days of exhibitions, performances, talks and special events. Here is our pick of art exhibitions to see during London Gallery Weekend…
June sees the return of several summer staples, such as the Serpentine Pavilion and the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition, alongside Meltdown Festival at the Southbank Centre, curated this year by Harry Styles. London Gallery Weekend also returns, with more than 120 galleries across the city taking part…
The 61st Venice Biennale opened on 9 May 2026 in Venice, with this year’s edition shaped around In Minor Keys, a curatorial theme conceived by the late Koyo Kouoh. The Biennale once again transforms Venice into a sprawling international exhibition, with more than 80 national pavilions taking over the Giardini, the Arsenale and sites across the city. Sofia, our arts contributor, picks her five standout national pavilions from this year’s edition.
Masaki Sugisaki is the Executive Chef at Dinings SW3 in London, where he is known for his contemporary interpretation of Japanese cuisine shaped by both traditional training in Japan and years of experience in the UK. His cooking bridges cultures, seasons, and philosophies, drawing equally on heritage techniques and the possibilities offered by British produce…
South African abstract artist Zach Zono is known for his expressive, gestural paintings that blur the line between instinct and structure. Currently presenting works throughout Rosewood London as part of his Artist Residency…
Major institutional announcements and landmark cultural investments this week highlight the evolving landscape of contemporary art and public culture across the UK and beyond, from Nan Goldin’s long-awaited return to London to Rene Matić winning one of photography’s most prestigious prizes…
The theme for the 61st International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, In Minor Keys, and its artists, were selected by Cameroonian curator Koyo Kouoh. The final form of the exhibition, however, was realised by a committee following Kouoh’s death in 2025…
The prestigious Turner Prize continues its tradition of spotlighting groundbreaking creativity with the announcement of its 2026 shortlist. Revealed by Tate Britain, this year’s nominees, Simeon Barclay, Kira Freije, Marguerite Humeau, and Tanoa Sasraku…
The Hayward Gallery has announced a major solo exhibition by acclaimed American artist and activist Nan Goldin titled You Never Did Anything Wrong. Opening on 24 November 2026, the exhibition marks Goldin’s first institutional UK show since 2002…
A guide to the key London art school degree shows in 2026, with confirmed dates to help you plan visits between May and July…
Mark Perkins is Executive Pastry Chef at Rosewood London, where he has played a central role in shaping the hotel’s pastry programme for more than two decades. With over 30 years’ experience in luxury hospitality, he is recognised for his highly creative, art-led approach to patisserie, particularly through Rosewood London’s celebrated Art Afternoon Tea series…
The Barbican Centre has unveiled its Outdoor Cinema 2026 programme, returning to the Sculpture Court this August with eleven nights of open-air screenings beneath the London skyline….