'Notorious heterosexual' Lucian Freud's letters suggest he had affair with Stephen Spender

Letters written to Spender by the young Freud have now emerged which offer tantalising hints that the friendship went beyond the platonic

Lewis Smith
Sunday 07 June 2015 23:04 BST
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A letter from Lucian Freud to Stephen Spender sent in 1941 which contains a self portrait
A letter from Lucian Freud to Stephen Spender sent in 1941 which contains a self portrait

With 14 acknowledged children, perhaps 40 more unconfirmed, and more female lovers than is decent to count, Lucian Freud was as close to being a “notorious heterosexual” as it is possible to get.

And yet rumours have long persisted that when he was a teenager still getting to grips not just with his painting style but with sex and sexuality, he had an affair with an older man – the poet Stephen Spender.

Letters written to Spender by the young Freud have now emerged which offer tantalising hints that the friendship went beyond the platonic and could help explain why the artist in later life was seemingly reluctant to talk about his teenage years.

The letters were kept hidden by the Spender family for years for fear that the hints of a homosexual fling in the 1930s between a man in his thirties and a teenager were too revealing – even keeping them secret from his official biographer Professor John Sutherland.

A letter from Lucian Freud to Stephen Spender sent in 1940

In the letters, Freud, born in 1922, teasingly signs himself off as “Lucio Fruit” and “Lucionus Fruitata” – literally ‘juicy fruit’ – and makes coy reference to the “delicate subject below the waist”.

In another he wishes Spender “lots of love” and, thanking him for the “ballad of Blundells Jail”, he says, “I read it again and again at night thinking of you,” and added an arrow pointing to a small penned picture of the poet.

The letters were written from 1939 to 1941, the year Spender married his second wife, Natasha, who later claimed that his “homosexual period” ended with her.

Lucian Freud (Getty)

Until then he had been bisexual, living as a couple with a man in the mid-1930s and marrying his first wife in 1936.

Professor Sutherland believes the letters are highly suggestive of an affair and the tone, he told The Mail on Sunday, was “frankly sexual”. He said: “To call yourself as a teenager a luscious fruit to a known and practising homosexual suggests either a relationship – not necessarily completely physical – or teasing of an improbable kind. I’m persuaded there was a mutually acceptable sexual relationship.”

Matthew Spender, the sculptor and poet’s son, said Freud as a young man was “the kind of man that my father would be incredibly attracted to”. He added: “If you think of the other young men in his life, they’re physically very similar to Lucian.”

Stephen Spender (Getty)

When he was older Freud, who is estimated to have had 500 female lovers, told a friend that the one man he’d ever wanted to have sex with was the jockey Lester Piggott. Journalist Geordie Greig, the editor of The Mail on Sunday who wrote a biography of the artist, said Freud had homosexual affairs but “never considered himself to be gay”.

Read more: Freud's gamble: A portrait of artist as betting man
See painting of woman who broke Lucian Freud's heart
Freud's 'Fat Sue' sells for £35m at Christie's auction

The letters, which are expected to fetch £28,000 to £42,000 when they are auctioned at Sotheby’s on 2 July, are described as offering a fascinating glimpse of the artist as a young man.

Oliver Barker, deputy chairman of Sotheby’s Europe, said: “While relatively little is known about Freud’s teenage life, the emergence of these letters is a sensational moment, providing a glimpse into the workings of a truly artistic mind.

“More than just letters, they are artworks in their own right. Filled with drawings and watercolours, they show the workings of the artist, reflecting his artistic output at the time.”

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