John the Painter presents 35 paintings and drawings by this little-known Cork artist who has spent most of his adult life in care. The exhibition includes one of his most striking works Jet Plane, Blue, Red, Yellow, Green, Boxes, Arrows on Grand Parade, Chinese Version, which has been donated to the Museum, which already holds a major collection of Outsider art in the Musgrave Kinley Outsider Archive.
The first exhibition by a native Outsider artist in an Irish national cultural
institution opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on 12 February
2003. John the Painter presents 35 paintings and drawings by this little-known
Cork artist who has spent most of his adult life in care. The exhibition
includes one of his most striking works Jet Plane, Blue, Red, Yellow, Green,
Boxes, Arrows on Grand Parade, Chinese Version, which has been donated to the
Museum, which already holds a major collection of Outsider art in the Musgrave
Kinley Outsider Archive.
John the Painter (so named because of the need to respect his privacy) has been
in psychiatric care since the 1960s, living in a communal and often difficult
environment for most of his adult life. Art has given him a means to explore
his own feelings and thoughts about that life, surprisingly creating a body of
artwork that is exuberantly colourful and celebratory.
When he was in Our Lady's Hospital in Cork (now closed), a nurse, Sheila
Holland, invited Cork Community Artlink to work with the patients. The
exhibition includes the first canvas John painted while working with Artlink, a
very dark self-portrait standing beside a brightly lit Christmas Tree with a
fantastic toy train - a Christmas remembered, or a fantasy?
Much of John's work is autobiographical, showing vivid memories of Cork in the
1960s before he went into hospital. Paintings of his early life, when he worked
as a messenger boy, show backdrops of the buildings and pubs of Cork featuring
the local Murphy's Brewery signage, the Father Matthew Statue and Saint
Finbarr's Cathedral.
He began work on sheets of paper and card, but quickly grew to painting on old
sheets supplied by Artlink and the hospital to satisfy his need for bigger
canvases. When presented with a blank canvas, he goes to it immediately, with a
clear sense of what he wants to do. His confident approach to composition and
colour is envied by mainstream artists who have seen his work.
Works chosen for this exhibition cover themes such as the launch of the
Titantic, a tale that lives in the folk memory of Cork, and the landscape of
Cork in the '60s including the Father Matthew Statue, a symbol of the Pioneer
Movement in Cork, justaposed with the Mangan Clock, a meeting place for courting
couples.
The exhibition, a collaborative project between IMMA's Collection and Education
and Community Departments is co-curated by Catherine Marshall, Head of the
Collection, and Helen O'Donoghue, Head of Education and Community Programmes.
The exhibition is accompanied by a fully-illustrated catalogue with essays by
Catherine Marshall and Helen O'Donoghue, as well as an interview with John the
Painter by William Frodé de la Foret, the artist from Cork Community Artlink,
who has worked most closely with John over the past decade.
Commenting on the exhibition Catherine Marshall said: "It is appropriate that
John the Painter's work will be hung in the room where we have just shown the
Táin Tapestries by Louis le Brocquy - Ireland's best known artist followed by
Ireland's least known artist. We think John the Painter is an important
painter. He is proof that the tradition of painting is alive and well in
Ireland, and can be discovered in unexpected places."
The Irish Museum of Modern Art has had an interest in the work of Outsider
artists since 1998, when it was given a spectacular collection of work by the
Musgrave Kinley Collection of Outsider Art. Outsider artists are self-taught
artists who make art as their only viable means of self expression. They are
often marginalized through mental ill-health or through social disadvantage.
John the Painter continues until 8 June 2003.
Admission is free.
Opening hours: Tue - Sat 10.00am - 5.30pm
Sun, Bank Holidays 12 noon - 5.30pm
Mondays, 18 April
Closed
For further information and colour and black and white images please contact
Monica Cullinane at Tel : +353 1 612 9900, Fax : +353 1 612 9999
Irish Museum of Modern Art
Royal Hospital Military Road Kilmainham 8
Dublin