ROBERT BALLAGH CITIZEN ARTIST Plays The Pearse Centre Nov 4
By: Gabrielle Sierra Oct. 29, 2010
Here's an art-book with a difference. In readable jargon-less style, Ciaran Carty portrays the painter Robert Ballagh much in the manner of one of his own portraits. "I think artists should jump in at the deep end and experience everything," says Ballagh. "The more you experience, the richer your work will be. If you're going to deal honestly with your own circumstance, you must be part of it. You can't be on the outside looking in." True to his word, Ballagh has employed his status as an artist to speak out against injustice, racism and the abuse of power. His paintings are a dazzling iconography of Ireland during a period of hectic cultural and political change.
Drawing on unparalleled access to the artist Carty provides a lively account of Ballagh's suburban Dublin origins, his student days as an architect, his interlude as a popular show-band guitarist, and his unexpected breakthrough as Ireland's first pop artist in the late 1960s.No other artist in the 1970s dared make work that directly addressed the sectarian violence in Northern Ireland in the eye-grabbing manner of Ballagh's subversive reworking of classic history paintings by Delacroix, David and Goya, while the satirical humour underlying his internationally-acclaimed series of people looking at paintings undermined the dogmatism of later modernism and its insistence on a self-contained art for art's sake formalism.Carty counterpoints this intricate crossover between Ballagh's aesthetic and political concerns by framing the book within a series of interviews recorded in his studio that provide a fly-on-the-wall account of the process of painting a particular portrait from the initial stage of photographs and sketches to the completed work.
Hardcover: 228 pages. Full colour throughout with 220 illustrations.
Dimensions: 12½ x 12 inches
Publisher: Zeus Medea Publishing
ISBN 978-0-9525376-1-8
Available from all good booksellers.
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