Marie Hanlon | |
---|---|
Born | Goresbridge, County Kilkenny, Ireland | 20 December 1948
Nationality | Irish |
Education | University College Dublin, National College of Art and Design |
Notable work | It’s all About Books (2019), DIC TAT (2014), Everything we see… (2014) |
Website | https://www.mariehanlon.com/ |
Marie Hanlon is a Dublin-based Irish artist working in a variety of media including painting, drawing, sculpture, video and installation. She has collaborated with Irish composers, most notably Rhona Clarke, in creating works which can be realised in both concert performance and gallery situations.
Hanlon received her early education from the Brigidine Sisters, Goresbridge , County Kilkenny and later graduated from University College, Dublin (1977) with a BA in English and History of European Painting. In 2018 she received an MA from The National College of Art & Design, Dublin. Hanlon was elected to Aosdána in 2015; Aosdána is the cultural body which recognises major and sustained contributions to the arts in Ireland. [1]
In 1988, Hanlon became a member of WAAG – Women Artists Action Group (1987–1991). She exhibited with the group in their first and only show in Ireland, Art Beyond Barriers at the Irish Museum of Modern Art in 1989 (Cummins, 1989). [2] Hanlon's first solo show was in Temple Bar Gallery in 1993. By now her works had begun to demonstrate a stylistic approach, which is simultaneously geometric and lyrical, their reduced elements tautly balanced and “characteristically subtle in the handling of tone, texture and composition.” (Finlay, 1997) [3] “The paintings are like poems or pieces of music, at once tentative and sensual, yet highly structured.” (Benson, 2004) [4]
“Forms are repeated in the paintings but rarely in exactly the same way. It is the repetition which gives the work its rhythm, a kind of pulse is established by stating and restating the idea. However, as soon as a pattern is set up it is quickly subverted and transformed, the beat changes as it were, giving the work greater complexity and interest.” (Clarke, 2009) [5]
Critic Gavin Weston has described “works that are paradoxically structurally contained yet emotionally expansive.” (Weston, 2004) [6]
Affinities with music in Hanlon’s work led to new developments and an expanded practice. Two significant exhibitions in 2014 involved collaborations with several contemporary Irish composers; Everything we see… at Solstice Arts Centre (2014) included works made with composers, Grainne Mulvey , Jane O’ Leary , Rhona Clarke and Emma O’Halloran . The show occupied all three of Solstice’s upper galleries and in the foyer, an installation of thirty-eight drawings further explored links between music and line. Mary Cremin observes ‘The mark-making of notation [musical] and its relationship to drawing is the beginning of exchange between composer and artist’. [7]
DIC TAT at Draíocht Centre for the Arts (2014) was a two-person show by Hanlon and composer Rhona Clarke. In this exhibition, a metronome provided basic pulse material from which sound and visual elements were derived. A group of drawings ‘dictated’ by various metronome beats were documented in real-time and shown on a two-channel video. ‘The narrow margin of space for deliberation remains confined to the intervals between beats.’ Rowan Sexton [8]
A further development of Hanlon’s collaborative practice is a video for live performance; Richard O’Donnell and The Royal Irish Academy Percussion Ensemble commissioned Behind closed Doors (2016) for the Tambourimba Percussion Festival, Cali, Colombia; music by Rhona Clarke, video Marie Hanlon. In 2019 accordionist Dermot Dunne played live to a screening of The Small Hours (2019) Shatin Town Hall, Hong Kong, music Rhona Clarke, video Marie Hanlon.
Hanlon’s exhibition (2019) It’s All About Books, The Cregan Library, Dublin City University, explored the book as art object, Irish Times critic Aidan Dunne wrote ‘’Even when her approach is playful, as it often is, what we see is imbued with what might be described as a threat of nullity, the disappearance or cancellation of meaning.’ [9] [10]
‘It's All About Books manifests the artist's ongoing exploration of the 'complexities of seeing', inviting viewers to variously consider: What kind of seeing occurs when we read.’ Material Knowledge: The Book as Artistic Device, Joanne Laws, It’s All About Books, 2019. [11]
Hanlon lives in Sutton on the Howth peninsula on the northside of Dublin. [1]
Patrick Scott was an Irish artist.
Barrie C. Cooke was an English-born Irish abstract expressionist painter.
The Hugh Lane Gallery, and originally the Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, is an art museum operated by Dublin City Council and its wholly-owned company, the Hugh Lane Gallery Trust. It is in Charlemont House on Parnell Square, Dublin, Ireland. Admission is free.
Samuel Walsh is an Irish abstract artist. He is a member of Aosdána, founder of the National Collection of Contemporary Drawing and is closely associated with the beginnings of EVA International. Born in London in 1951 to Irish parents, he moved to Limerick, Ireland in 1968, where he resided until 1990. He now lives and works in Co. Clare.
Eileen MacDonagh was born in Geevagh, County Sligo in 1956 and has worked as a sculptor since the 1980s. For her contribution to sculpture and the Arts in Ireland, MacDonagh was elected in 2004 to Aosdána, the Irish organisation that recognises artists that have contributed a unique body of work.
Nick Miller is an Irish contemporary artist who has become known for reinvigorating painting and drawing in the traditional genres of portraiture, landscape and still-life. He has developed an intense and individual approach to the practice of working directly from life, that has been described as a form of encounter painting.
Daphne Wright is an Irish visual artist, who makes sculptural installations using a variety of techniques and media to explore how a range of languages and materials can be used to probe unspoken human preoccupations. Recent international exhibition highlights include Hotspot, Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Rome, curated by Gerardo Mosquera; Daphne Wright: Prayer Project, Davis Museum, USA, Portals; the Hellenic Parliament with ΝΕΟΝ, Athens; Infinite Sculpture, Gulbenkian Museum, Lisbon. Wright curated the 2018 exhibition The Ethics of Scrutiny at the Irish Museum of Modern Art as part of the Freud Project. Wright has received the Paul Hamlyn Award, The Henry Moore Foundation Fellowship, and The British School of Rome fellowship. She is a member of Aosdana and is represented by Frith Street Gallery, London.
Rhona Clarke is an Irish composer and pedagogue.
Anita Groener is an artist based in Dublin, Ireland. She makes paintings, monumental site-specific drawings, film and animation which she exhibits internationally. Groener graduated in 1980 with a BA from the Mollerinstituut Moller Institute in Tilburg, the Netherlands. She received an MA from the Hogeschool voor de Kunsten, Arnhem, the Netherlands, in 1982, and moved to Dublin in the same year. In 2005 she was elected by her peers to be a member of Aosdána, the major cultural body for the arts in Ireland. Her work is represented in the collections of The Irish Museum of Modern Art; The Arts Council of Ireland; the State Art Collection, Ireland; C21 Museum Hotels, USA; VU University Medical Centre, Amsterdam; DELA Insurance, the Netherlands; Sun Communities USA; The Law Library of Ireland; The National Drawing Archive Ireland; the Contemporary Irish Art Society; AIB Bank; and ABN-AMRO Bank and private collections in the US, Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, Belgium.
Charles Tyrrell is an Irish painter and printmaker born in Trim, County Meath in 1950. Tyrrell graduated from NCAD in 1974. In 1984 Tyrell moved to Allihies on the Beara Peninsula in West Cork where he lives and works.
Kathy Prendergast, is an Irish sculptor, draftsman, and painter.
Jaki Irvine is an Irish contemporary visual artist, specialising in music and video installations, and a novelist. Elected to Ireland's national affiliation of artists, Aosdána, she represented the country at the 1997 Venice Biennale. She divides her time between Dublin and Mexico City.
Women Artists Action Group (W.A.A.G.) was an Irish feminist artists group founded with the goal of promoting the profile of women artists from Ireland, which was active from 1987 to 1991.
Pauline Cummins is an Irish sculptor, painter, performance and video artist. She was a lecturer at the National College of Art and Design from 1992 - 2014.
Niamh O'Malley is a contemporary Irish artist known for sculptures and moving image installations. She was elected to membership in Ireland's artistic academy, Aosdána, and represented the country at the 59th Venice Biennale.
Diana CopperwhiteRHA is an Irish painter. She is a member of Aosdána, an elite Irish association of artists.
Eamon ColmanRHA is an Irish painter. He is a member of Aosdána, an elite Irish association of artists.
Geraldine O'Reilly is an Irish painter, drawer and printmaker. She is a member of Aosdána, an elite Irish association of artists.
Eddie Kennedy is an Irish painter. He is a member of Aosdána, an elite Irish association of artists.
Nigel Rolfe is an English-born performance artist and video artist based in Ireland. He is a member of Aosdána, an elite association of Irish artists.