Benefits Supervisor Sleeping


Benefits Supervisor Sleeping is an oil on canvas painting by the British artist Lucian Freud, from 1995. It is held in a private collection.

History and description

The depiction of a fat, naked woman, lying on a couch, it is a portrait of Sue Tilley, a Jobcentre supervisor, who then weighed about. She is shown apparently sleeping in a couch, while holding with her a hand one of her unusually large breasts. Her belly and legs also show clear signs of her being extremely overweight.
Tilley is the author of a biography of the Australian performer Leigh Bowery titled Leigh Bowery, The Life and Times of an Icon. Tilley was introduced to Freud by Bowery, who was already modelling for him. Freud painted a number of large portraits of her around the period 1994–1996, and came to call her "Big Sue". He said of her body: "It's flesh without muscle and it has developed a different kind of texture through bearing such a weight-bearing thing."

Art market

The painting held the world record for the highest price paid for a painting by a living artist, when it was sold by Guy Naggar for US$33.6 million at Christie's, in New York, in May 2008, to Roman Abramovich.
Freud's painting The Brigadier break this record when was sold for £35.8 million in 2015, four years after his death, replacing Benefits Supervisor Sleeping as the most expensive Freud painting at auction.

Exhibitions

The painting was exhibited twice at Flowers Gallery: