05 Feb. - 10 Apr. 2011
Jack B. Yeats: The Outsider
Free / This major survey exhibition of Jack B Yeats promises to bring many of his great masterpieces together for the first time in almost 40 years. Guest curated by Brian O’Doherty (previously known as Patrick Ireland), the internationally acclaimed artist, critic and theorist, the show will explore Yeats’ interest in the subject and realities of the outsider persona.
Many of the great works from Yeats’ late expressionist phase will be included alongside his more local, political works of the 1920s. The show will be accompanied by a new publication with a major new critical text by Brian O’Doherty,as well as new texts by Dr. Tricia Cusack and Dr. Thomas McEvilley
The Yeatsian Legacy Project is delivered by Sligo Arts Service, The Model & partners. The project is supported by the PEACE III Programme, managed for the Special EU Programmes Body by Sligo County Council on behalf of Sligo Peace & Reconciliation Partnership Committee.
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Jack B. Yeats was the youngest son of the portrait painter John Butler Yeats and the brother of the writer William Butler Yeats. Though he was born in London, Jack spent most of his childhood in Sligo in the care of his maternal grandparents. It was a place that influenced him deeply and he later said that every painting he produced “had a thought of Sligo in it”.
Jack studied in London at the South Kensington School of Art and later at the Westminster School of Art, though he was largely self-taught and had his own distinct style from the beginning. While still at school he was working as an illustrator and contributing to various publications such as Paddock Life, the Daily Graphic and the Vegetarian.
His early work, mostly in watercolour, focuses on the Sligo of his boyhood. These works display his emerging interest in the people and places of every day life- the market day, the sailor, and the races. In 1894 he married his fellow art student Mary Cottenham White, and they settled in England. He held his first solo show in London in 1897 and shortly afterwards he began to focus solely on Irish subject matter. In 1910 he returned to live in Ireland. The same year he began to contribute illustrations to the satirical publication Punch under the pseudonym W. Bird, and over the next 30 years he supplied the magazine with over five hundred drawings.
In 1905 Yeats toured Connemara with the writer John M Synge who had been commissioned to write a series of articles for the Manchester Guardian on life in the west of Ireland. This trip, coupled with his upbringing in Sligo, made an indelible impression on the artist. His wide-ranging interest in all of humanity led him to depict subjects ranging from street scenes, to boxing matches, the races, and funerals.
In 1910 he returned to Ireland and settled first in Bray and later in Dublin. He became an associate member of the RHA in 1915 and a full member the following year. He was a founder member of the Society of Dublin Painters in 1920, and in 1922 he participated in the Exposition d’Art Irlandais in Paris. He won the silver and the bronze medals at the VIIIe Olympiade in Paris in 1924 for the painting The Liffey Swim.
Yeats’ early paintings were in watercolour and he was over thirty by the time he began to work regularly in oils. For years his style remained essentially conservative, but in the mid-1920s a profound change began to take place. Yeats’s handling grew much freer, his forms were defined by brushstrokes rather than by line, his colours grew richer and more luminous and his earlier realism gradually gave way to a moody, intimate and highly personal romanticism. These tendencies grew even more marked over the next two decades, until in his final years when his subject-matter is sometimes buried and almost obliterated by rich impasto, bravura brushwork and flame-like areas of colour.
He exhibited widely in Dublin and London, and in 1932 held solo shows at the Ferragail Galleries and the Barbizon Museum of Irish Art, New York. He first showed with Victor Waddington Galleries, Dublin in 1943, and continued to exhibit there until his death. A major retrospective of his work opened at the Tate Gallery, London in 1948. Jack B Yeats died in Dublin on March 28 1957
Brian O’Doherty is an internationally celebrated artist, historian and critic. Born in Ireland in 1928 and initially trained as a doctor, O’Doherty developed a friendship with Jack Yeats as he studied medicine and nurtured this friendship up until Yeats’ death in Dublin.
In 1961, O’Doherty moved to New York, where his art career developed in the burgeoning conceptual art scene. In his work, he investigates limits of perception, language, serial systems, and identity. O’Doherty invented a number of artist-personas as a means of pulling politics into his practice more forcibly.
His most notable alias was Patrick Ireland, adopted in protest against the Bloody Sunday massacre in Derry in 1972, active throughout the subsequent Troubles in Northern Ireland, and laid to rest in 2008.
O’Doherty has written extensively on many artists as well tacked issues of exhibiting, museum space and art and ideology. His critical writing has influenced a generation of artists and museum historians, particularly his renowned essay Inside the White Cube: The Ideology of the Gallery Space, first published in 1976, argues that galleries’ antiseptic white walls have helped to determine the meaning of modern art as much as the artworks themselves. O’Doherty strives to move us beyond this white cube, emphasizing the spectator’s agency in the experience and interpretation of art. He often works in series, realising themes in various media.
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