Friday, September 26, 2014

New Landscape Series.

This summer in-between various other projects (including the summer gallery in Kenmare.) I’ve been working on a series of landscapes in oil. 
Derryquinn Cove


I’ve often thought that if one were to paint this part of the world people wouldn’t believe it was real. It's the kind of landscape the impressionists would have killed for. More wild than pastoral, with ruins and famine-era stone walls scattered through it. Sometime in the early spring I was walking up a local hill, looked out over an almost obscenely beautiful visa and thought.. “ What am I doing not painting this right now?"


Heron at Dawn. 



So these are scenes from areas within walking distance of the studio ( the fine weather also meant I could get outside to sketch which was great.) 

Walking, Late july. 
There is no way to capture the real beauty of this part of the country though. You’ll just have to come and see it for yourself. 

Sunday, June 8, 2014

Everyday Tales.




After a fairly long break from the medium I have turned my hand to ink again and expanded my range of Everyday Tales Prints. They're not up on the website yet so the first look is here. ( Below. ) 

When people see them they are sometimes surprised that they are mine.  My usual style is expansive, complex and colourful, and couldn’t be further stylistically from the stark minimalism of these small pictures. 

I have never believed that artists should constrain themselves to one style, medium or subject. It makes it easier for an agent or gallery to market your work if you do, but I suppose art and economics never have gotten along very well.

What I have found is that the only way I can avoid boredom and stagnation is to challenge myself, and what is artistic style really but the artist deliberately putting constraints on themselves, a set of specific obstacles in their own way? 

After a period of creative block , I one day found myself doodling this: 


There's something about the image that is familiar. But I’m sure I never saw it anywhere. Something poignant and iconic but at the same time almost cliché. 
Big Bad. 

Umbrella
Mushrooms


The theme is obvious: Childhood. Snippets of memory, that almost hallucinogenic imagination mixed up with ordinary activities, illustration from story books, those moments that meant nothing at the time but stand out retrospectively.

They are red, black and white always. These are the most primal and basic of colours, highly symbolic and applicable to a myriad of things, mythological, psychological and historical. They can’t be anything but a kick in the stomach for most of us.

It is interesting how varied the interpretation is. Some people are charmed by them and buy them for their children. Others find them utterly sinister and scold me for having made them. 

I have no desire to stop painting in oils and make them my life’s work, but they act as a palate cleanser of sorts. I’m able to see clearer after having worked on them. When every line counts and every colour has meaning it gives one perspective. 


North.

Red Ball

Seagull

Reading





Monday, March 10, 2014

The end of Hibernation

It's been a long winter and on the first sunny day of spring I have emerged from the studio, blinking like a mole in the sunlight.

Whats that yellow thing in the sky?


The winter months are my most productive painting time, art projects ( more on them in future posts) are well underway and my hibernation is almost over.

But for now I observe that it has  been a very literary start to 2014.
Illustration from  This Year in Jerusalem.


This Year in Jerusalem Has sold out its first edition, with positive reviews in JNS, Hebrew magazine Saloona,   The Times of Israel, and a mention in  the Cornell Chronicle


I'm delighted to have been part of its creation. And will soon be working on a cover for Jeff's second book.



Closer to home, when not painting the winter away I've been writing.  I've had two poems published in the latest edition  of THE SHOp  a magazine for poetry.



Jo-Annes book  Battle For Cedar Creek, now had a website, interesting content coming soon.

And last but not least my Father has written a thought provoking piece for Live Learn Evolve.

Happy Spring everyone!  Lets hope this continues for a while.



Thursday, September 19, 2013

Summer Shenanigans.


So another Summer has passed by like a tornado. Leaving the wreckage of me in it's wake...

From Baltimore to Israel via Kenmare!

This particular tornado was a fun one. It began in June When Jeff Barken came to visit and we launched our book with a reading/signing at the Bookstop Cafe in Kenmare. The book is now avaliable at Amazon and prints of selected illustrations are up at my print shop.  You can read about our collaboration at monologging.

Ourselves at the book signing.

To Dublin!

Then, much to my surprise and delight, Lucy Gaster the producer of a Sky Arts TV show contacted me and asked if I wanted to sell my work at a big art fair at the RDS. So off I went with my Aunt Jo to Dublin. 


Myself at the RDS

The show, to be broadcast in November. Is the Sky Arts Portrait Artist of the Year reality show. I wasn't competing on the show myself but had an excellent view of the proceedings from my table and  got to meet  Frank Skinner, who is a gentleman and Pauline McLynn who is absolutely lovely (and game enough to pose for total strangers in the almost nude.)

 Across from me was an increasingly exhausted and very patient Lethal Bizzle. Who sat unnervingly still for a whole day.  Watch the show and you might see me in the background cowering in fear  as the cameras roll by. 


I also had the chance to catch up with filmmaker/author Tomi Reichenthal. Whose portrait I'm painting as part of this project. (The painting is nearly finished Tomi!)   He had just come back from the Galway film festival where his latest documentary Close to Evil, got a standing ovation.  

To Killarney AND Dublin... Again!

After that was The Gathering: An Exhiition of Kerry Artists. The brainchild of Jimmy Deenihan. Minister for Arts, Heritage & Gaeltacht Affairs. The Exhibition opened in Killarney, then moved to Dublin, and will hopefully go international from there.  Here is the beautifully produced catalogue. 

The exhibition is currently on display at The Copper House Gallery  in Dublin. Limited edition prints of the work are available through them. 

 I painted Vapor Trails for the exhibition. This is what I had to say about the painting:  

I think that anyone who grew up in rural Ireland, particularly the Southwest, will identify strongly with the landscape. The bogland is more than a pretty view or an unusual ecosystem. Its an environment that gets into your soul, if you live in it you are bound to explore it. Even though it can be uncompromising, hazardous and difficult to reconnoiter. It appeals, and maybe contributes to, our sense of curiosity and adventure. 

Some of my earliest memories are of stomping in the bogland around my home in a pair of oversized wellies. I don't think I'm the only one. The child in the foreground is pointing at a contrail. A lot of us leave, but no matter where we go we'll always be bog babies at heart.


To Limerick!

From here its on to Limerick and another group exhibition: Building Resilience, which is part of Mental Heath Awareness week. 

 This painting is going to be on display:






It's called ' A Happy Land Far Away'.  Centenarian cartoon fans may reciognise the title as a variation of Krazy Kat's catchphraze. The landscape and theme of the painting are an homage to George Herriman, whose strange art has always appealed to me. His battle with his own identity and the clues to his internal conflict pepper his work.


Back to Kenmare! 

 Then back home to exhibit at the Kenmare Lace Festival on October 5th. ( Painting revealed soon.) 


All in all it's been a wild ride. 

Di. 
















Tuesday, June 4, 2013

"This Year in Jerusalem."





Over the past year American author Jeffrey F. Barken and I have been working on our second project; This Year in Jerusalem. An illustrated book of interconnected short stories.

You may remember Jeff from Mackerel, our experimental interactive collaboration of last year. This time we decided on something more traditional. 

Now that I can finally sit back with some objectivity and truly look at it, This Year in Jerusalem really is a great book. The story of two friends, divided by geography and betrayal. Set in both Israel and the USA, it's a story of family and forgiveness as much as one of politics and division. 

It's was, of course, a challenge. The short story genre can be tough to illustrate without spoiling or diminishing the story arch. Illustration is usually associated with children's literature, this is very much the opposite.  Some of the themes are  uncompromising and upsetting but all in all it was an immensley fun and rewarding experience. 

I decided to go back to basics in term of style and medium and went with black and white sketches in ink with a bamboo pen. I think it suits the subtle yet gritty descriptive language of the book. 


Illustration from the story The Draft Dodger. 

We relied heavily on Skype to complete the project and have been in such regular contact that it's been easy to forget that we haven't been in the same room for about 6 years. So I'm delighted that Jeff and his wife Avi will be here for the book launch on the 12th of June at I pm at the Bookstop Cafe in Kenmare where we will be signing copies and I will have limited edition prints of selected illustrations.  Everyone welcome. 

Saturday, January 12, 2013

For Zoltan Zinn-Collis












Above is a sketch I drew in November of Zoltan Zinn Collis at his home in Athy. It's one of the preliminary sketches for a series of oil paintings I'm working on for the Sentinel 70 Project, for exhibition in 2015.

It was Lee Tiller who introduced me to his brainchild, the idea of the Sentinel 70  project: An art exhibition commemorating those lost in the Holocaust on the 70th anniversary of the end of the war. Although the planned exhibition isn't for another 2 years, I felt I should not waste time.

The idea was daunting. It is a subject that is often exploited in art for horror, or sentimentalised for entertainment (I don't know which is worse). The choices, it seemed, were to either work with symbolism or realism.

Either option would pose problems. In my own life I have been so protected, and lucky to have lived in peace. I felt it would be disingenuous to imagine I had a grasp on the psychology of genocide and war. I am not brave enough to make art about atrocities while survivors still live and deal with the memories every day. I asked myself how a survivor might feel viewing such an exhibition.

So, after much deliberation, I contacted the HETI and asked them how many survivors live in Ireland, and if the idea of a series of portraits would be an acceptable tribute to them. (Thank you Lynn Jackson for all your help).

A while later I got a call from Zoltan. I knew his name. I had read his autobiography few months before.

"Ah! Hello, "Mr Zinn-Collis."

"Zoltan! Please."

"Zoltan?"

"That's better!"

It turned out he had worked at Parknasilla Hotel in the 60's and had plenty of, very entertaining, stories for me about Sneem, which I won't transcribe here, to protect the reputation of the general population of the village.

Immediately understanding the need to properly meet someone before embarking on a portrait, he invited me to his house in Kildare. When I assured him that there was no need to talk about the past or anything that made him uncomfortable, he laughed.

"Oh you'll see. I love to talk."

Indeed he didn't take himself too seriously. He insisted on meeting me at the train station.

"You can't miss me. I'm small, round and bald."

His rounded posture stemmed from spinal TB contracted as a child. He had trouble breathing too.

"The one lung I have left has emphysema," he explained, asking me as he drove across town to his house who else I was going to be visiting.

At the mention of Suzie Diamond, he smiled.

"Ah, my friend Suzie! She used to mind me when we were in Belsen."

Suzie had been only four years old. Zoltan's mother and her own mother were both Hungarian, they met on the transport. Both women would be lost just after liberation but their children formed a close bond during their long convalescence in the Belsen hospital.

Suzie would later tell me that when she thinks of Zoltan as a child she doesn't see a face as much as a huge smile and shining eyes.

Zoltan and Suzie in a Swedish hospital 1946

Dr Collis said of his first meeting with Zoltan:

"On my way around the children’s hospital one morning I came into a small ward. Here I found Han with the most entrancing scrap of humanity in her arms. He appeared one great smile. There was very little else of him. The fever (typhus) had just left him, his body was wasted.”

By all accounts he was a charming child who one couldn't help but love. Dr Collis certainly loved him at first sight, that much is clear in his writing. He was charming as an adult too. He went out of his way to make me feel comfortable in his home.

We sat in the kitchen and had a cup of tea. He let me use his Winnie the Pooh cup (he was a big fan, he said). He showed me pictures from one of his father's books of himself and his sister, Edit, as beautiful children, sitting on the grass outside the hospital at Belsen, their heads still shorn.






Edit and Zoltan with an unnamed Roma child.


Zoltan was one of the last living links to the charismatic and accomplished Dr Collis, who was a "Big personality" to say the least.

"He used to walk into (a notable Dublin Hotel)..." Zoltan recalled mirthfully "...Wearing muddy wellies and a hat with a bit of bog cotton in it. He'd stride in there like he owned the place and the staff would be so polite," 'Oh Dr Collis!' "Of course I would be trailing behind hiding my face in embarrassment and he wouldn't know why."

It was Robert Collis's confidence, and his great compassion, that bought Zoltan, his sister Edit (both of whom Collis adopted) Suzie, her brother Tibor and two other surviving children to Ireland, at a time when the country wouldn't take Jewish refugees.

"He walked in without any official papers and said, basically, 'What are you going to do about it?' "

Zoltan credited his sense of humour, in part, for his survival, but there was, of course, great sadness there too, and a certain level of resentment, which he said, "comes and goes."

"I'm not sure, sometimes I feel as though I could let go of it, then sometimes I feel like it's the sort of thing that I should take to my grave. I really don't know."

One thing he did was to help others. He worked for the Samaritans for 10 years. He got rather upset talking about the "awful things" that happened to some people in industrial schools in the 70s and 80s.

Suffering, it seems, does not necessarily desensitise one to the suffering of others. That is good to know.

In more recent years he traveled to schools and educated teenagers about the Holocaust.

After teasing me: ("I promised my wife I wouldn't give you hell about your German name.") He told me the story of one school lecture, when a young girl ran over and hugged him, then burst into tears.

"She said 'I'm German, I'm so sorry!' "So then, of course, I felt terrible!"

For all his talk of resentment he didn't seem to hold a grudge.

"We wonder: Why Germany? Why anywhere? Why Rwanda or the Balkans? This... impulse..., this tendency we have, it manifested in the way of the country, in bureaucracy and education and 'civilisation', But look at us!" (He indicated the world in general) "Look at a new born baby, we're all born with closed fists."

He clearly loved children and his family was very precious to him. Showing me pictures of his great grandchildren on his phone and the artwork on his fridge. He was a lover of art in general and had what might have been an original Augustus John sketch in his living room. He told me he had a lot of sympathy for "starving artists."

His first family: the one that he lost? He didn't mourn for them properly until revisiting Belsen in the 1990s with Suzie for an RTE documentary. He had tears in his eyes describing his visit to the mass grave that may have housed the remains of  his mother, baby sister and his brother, who died next to him in the Red Cross tent after liberation.

"He wasn't as sick as me, apparently, but he decided he'd seen enough."

His physical health was a lifelong reminder of his history. He showed me his vast collection of medicine, (the pink painkillers being his favorite.)

"I always say: I've been to every '-ologist' at Tallaght Hospital except the gynecologist," he joked.

On the way back to the station he told me more about the Collis family and Robert's brothers, John Collis and Maurice, who were also both writers. He hoped that one day someone would make a film about them. His own remarkable life, I thought, would make an epic in itself.

Before I boarded the train I thanked him for welcoming me into his house, and said that if the portrait reflected any of his personality it would be great.

"Yeah, well, I warned you, I like to talk." He shrugged off the compliment.

Humble and brave and, I hope, in the end quite free.

In November, after the death of my grandfather, whilst looking through his bedside table, I found a copy of Robert Collis's autobiography, To be a Pilgrim, in which he, so evocatively, describes Zoltan as a child. I hadn't told Max the names of any of the people I was working with (or much about the project really, for fear of upsetting him while he was sick), So he must have picked up the book by chance.

Not long afterwards I got a call from Zoltan's daughter Caroline to say that he had passed away.

It was only 17 days later that his beloved sister Edit followed him. The close bond with her brother was not severed for long. Edit lived in Bray, she didn't talk about her wartime experiences. Her father's book The Ultimate Value. (Published 1951)  Is a harrowing tribute to her bravery as a child. 


My heart goes out to Zoltan's wife Joan, and his daughters and grandchildren. You had a wonderful man in your life and I'm so glad I met him, if only briefly.

A generation is slowly leaving us. Their memories are so important. The lives they lived more important still. They lived, they had families, they had careers, they had the years that were so brutally taken from millions of others.

Every day of their lives is a slap in the face to the genocide that tried to take them (that human tendency to grasp and take from our brothers), a reminder that, in the end, people are stronger than that.

Let's make them immortal in our own memories. 

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

For My Grandfather.




Max Muller 1935-2012

Max Muller, one of the founding members of Brushwood Studios Art Gallery, passed away on Sunday night in the wonderful care of the staff of Kerry general Hospital.

 Born in South Africa to a German Father and English mother, Max spent his early years near Johannesburg. Before a fateful holiday to visit relatives in Germany would see his family trapped in occupied Europe for the duration of the war. His family returned to South Africa in 1945. He never spoke much about his childhood.

 Max was always something of a rebel. A quality he admired in others also. Maybe this is what drew him to his wife Anne. They lived in the town of Durban where his son Etienne and daughter Jo-Anne were born.

 Anne says "One day he returned from work in the insurance office depressed, because he had been promoted, and if he accepted, as he said, it would amount to a life sentence." Anne asked him what he liked to do most in the world. He said "Climbing in the mountains."

 She persuaded him to do the irresponsible thing and embrace an uncertain, but potentially fulfilling life. They moved their young family to a remote and beautiful rift valley in the western Transvaal where Max and Anne founded an adventure camp (Sun Valley).

 The camp revolved around rock climbing, remote trekking, kayaking and the like. It grew to become an integrated residential leadership course covering many aspects of group dynamics and interaction as well as communication techniques and how to work in teams. Eventually they incorporated drug rehabilitation and gave a temporary or even permanent home to many neglected and troubled teenagers.

 Max was good with teenagers: he respected their energy, their enthusiasm, their recklessness, their ability to adapt and to endure, their powers of recuperation, and most of all what he called their potential. If a young person was striving with energy and joy toward anything purposeful, he was delighted.

 Many of the residents of Sun Valley, 40 years later, were still in communication with him. He was a hugely charismatic and influential figure. Generous, especially with his time and energy. Max did not judge anyone harshly, and even marginalised young people felt accepted in his company.

 Neither he nor Anne ever showed much respect for authority figures, especially if they were not worthy of it. This is partly why they managed the audacious lifestyle that they did. This is also why they left South Africa in 1976 after the Massacre of 600 unarmed high school students in Soweto.

 An Irish grandmother on Max’s side from Glengariff enabled the family to obtain Irish citizenship. In 1977 they found themselves in Sneem, Co. Kerry.

 It was with typical optimism and enthusiasm that he began to build his new life. Anne, an artist, supported the family with her watercolours. Max and his son Etienne built a gallery that, filled with Anne's, Jo- Anne's and daughter in-law Pam's art, would support the family for the next 35 years (and counting).

 In middle age, he delighted in being a grandfather and could often be seen cycling around Sneem village with a small child on his handlebars. Typically with a cigarette in his mouth.

An avid gardener he used to spend hours in his vegetable garden. In old age, when long illness disabled him physically he would read a lot. Mostly non-fiction or philosophy.

 He loved people, especially the ones that no one else would love. He used to pet stray dogs without a care for fleas. Goodbye Max. We loved you back.

 Di.

*************

 William Dorling, Was a full time Sun Valley resident, and moved to Ireland with my family, he helped to build Brushwood Stuidios. Will was visiting us last week, and so got to see Max before he passed away. This is his tribute: Thank you Will you have been, and always will be, a part of my family.

Will, Dad and Max building the studio in the 1970s.

Max Muller’s encounters with History by Will Dorling - 21/11/12

Max never spoke much about himself so what one learnt of him had to be read from in between the lines and gleaned from conversations.

Two significant things enabled me to paint a picture of Max’s early life – Berlin and beetroot!  The fact that aged nine he was near Berlin with his mother in 1944 and that he hated beetroot because that was all there was to eat.  I can kind of picture the scene, but in black and white, bombed out devastated Germany in utter chaos and a young mother with two boys trying to get out.  Max’s father had tried to steer the family away from trouble but unfortunately come 1944 they ended up in the centre of imploding Germany.  Fortunately the intervention of an American GI tipped them off to get out of an area that was due to fall into the Russian zone.  What now looks like a movie script was a reality for them, typical of Max’s epic life.  The family then managed to get out of war torn Europe and start a new life in South Africa.





I do not know much more about this period of Max’s life other than he met and fell in love with Anne and by typical determination managed to remove the slight obstacle of her being engaged to someone else, and he went on to marry her in 1956.  Ten (?) years later, faced with the stagnancy of careers in insurance and teaching and being offered glamorous promotion they courageously made the shift to freedom and gave everything up to start a new venture with their young children Etienne and Jo-Anne, and headed for Anne’s parents’ farm to start an adventure and leadership camp for children that became Sun Valley.
Max and Anne as teenagers.

My biggest recollection of Max is his incredible, indomitable will power.  When there were big projects, which there always were, come what may he would be on the building site, leading, pushing and grinding the project through to fruition with sheer, unstoppable determination – right at the rock face!!  I was always in awe of his staggering unflinching will power which made me feel like a will power cripple.  Despite this Max always encouraged people and led people through inspiring them to join in and help build his vision.  Max and Anne’s greatest talent was in engaging young people and inspiring them to fulfil their dreams and practically this involved opening up their home and Sun Valley to the young, many lost, and in a wide permutations of various crises.
Max with  group of hikers. 

Thus I found myself at the age of fourteen undergoing the solid character building task of having to fill up lorry loads of sand, wilting in the South African mid-summer sun with soft hands blistered at every point they encountered the shovel, nevertheless inspired by Max and Anne to build something new.  The standard alarm call for shirkers amongst the Sun Valley campers was, “Quick – pick up a shovel, here comes Max!!”
Awareness of history, of what happened - does not always teach us of the most glaringly obvious problem, at any point in time we cannot see the future, which history peruses knowingly as the past.  Having just got through the trials and tribulations of building up Sun Valley to point of success where now the family could enjoy having their own home, they then found themselves with history clumsily banging on the door in the form of Soweto Riots, brutal shootings, conscription for the young and looming chaos.  Once more Max found himself where a dark tyrannical, rock like regime, was ruining lives and trampling freedom.

In true Max fashion he was not complacent and I can still remember the epic meeting we had and in strong Chairmanly manner he summed up the obvious, having got everyone’s opinions and concluded that we had to get out of South Africa.  It takes great courage to up and leave everything in your forties but that is what Max and Anne achieved and by providence and the blessing of Max’s Irish Grandmother, Mrs Ponsonby McCreight, we all ended up in Ireland a year later.  Blind History could not have foreseen the strange turn of events that would find us in Lisdoonvarna, County Clare, wood carving and painting.  Once more Max faced the grind of rebuilding, but this time by carving Celtic cross and Irish Harp bookends, which we young people unkindly but affectionately teased him about as he treated the wood like stone.  Some short time later, after further wriggles and twists of history, Max would find himself back on his favourite medium, a rocky outcrop near Sneem, where we started to build a new home and studios.              



Take Sean Connery, Anthony Quinn and Yul Brynner and roll them into one and you have a kind of Max.  An international man, with authority, dynamic energy and charm engaged in epic struggles!  Max could pass for an Arab, a Jew, a Spaniard, an Iranian, in his last days he was like a Biblical grey bearded prophet.

He faced his last years with typical courage having to deal with terrible and unavoidable pain, probably the ravages of what cruel and unkind history had left on his body.

So our dear Max has moved on and I am sure he can now feel proud and satisfied as the Angels steer him through his life review, that like a latter day Moses, his earthly task has been well accomplished and he has left his family in a place of freedom and safety, and the love and encouragement he gave to so many young people, lives on in the inspiration he gave them.  I can hear the Hebrew Slaves’ chorus from Nabucco as an appropriate send off for Max:-


Fly, thoughts, on wings of gold;
go settle upon the slopes and the hills,
where, soft and mild,
the sweet air of our native land smells fragrant!
Greet the banks of the Jordan
and Zion's toppled towers.
Oh, my country so lovely and lost!
Oh, memory so dear and despairing!
Golden harp of the prophetic seers,
why do you hang mute upon the willow?
Rekindle our heart's memories and speak of times gone by!
Mindful of the fate of Jerusalem,
either sound a song of sad lamentation,
or else let the Lord give us the strength to bear our sufferings!



Max and Anne on their 50th anniversary