Archive
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Magic and Loss
Magic and Loss 21 November - 21 December 2024 The exhibition’s title is taken from a 1992 album by Lou Reed. The album consists of a sequence of gritty, downbeat songs, which may account for its relative obscurity. But I and many others have found it, while tough going in some respects, ultimately emotionally enriching. It was shaped by... Read more -
Nevan Lahart
Lazy Luddite Lapped by LARPers 17 October - 16 November 2024 The gallery is pleased to present Lazy Luddite Lapped by LARPers, a solo exhibition by Nevan Lahart. Slow-Mo car crash Aesthetic A show in different parts, Rehung on a regular basis. Nevan Lahart's expansive body of works stretch every type of media and dimension. They commandeer everyday materials with... Read more -
Dermot Seymour
The Nine Primates of Ulster 12 September - 12 October 2024 The gallery is pleased to present The Nine Primates of Ulster, a solo exhibition by Dermot Seymour. In the winter of 2022, Dermot Seymour, while out walking his dog, slipped and broke his hip and leg. As a result he was out of action for a while. He was not... Read more -
Kathy Tynan
Meantime 8 August - 7 September 2024 Meantime | Kathy Tynan | 8 th August – 7 th September 2024 Accompanying Text written by Ingrid Lyons Meantime is a collection of paintings by Kathy Tynan made over the past two years. The title is partly borrowed from the 1983 film of the same name by Tynan's... Read more -
DANNIELLE TEGEDER
CHRYSOPOEIA 4 July - 3 August 2024 The Gallery is pleased to present Chrysopoeia, a solo exhibition by New York-based artist Dannielle Tegeder. Tegeder’s new body of work includes paintings and mobiles that draw from an architectural language of blueprints and mechanical drawings. A parallel interest in cosmological systems, understood through occult methods for accessing the divine,... Read more -
Salvatore of Lucan
Fancy Situations 6 - 29 June 2024 Accompanying Text by Megan Nolan When I looked through images of the paintings in Fancy Situations, I was thinking that one thing I’ve always liked about Salvatore’s work is how friendly it feels to me. I don’t often feel that way about visual art, quite the opposite actually- more often... Read more -
Sonia Shiel
dirty-wow-sun 9 May - 1 June 2024 The term dirty — wow — sun* is an emerging multi-lingual neologism used as an alternative for 'The Anthropocene.’ Attributing an enhanced vibrancy to pollution, it describes hyper-saturated sunsets - as moments of our own making, and emblems of our own undoing. In her exhibition, dirty — wow — sun,... Read more -
Paul Nugent
Figures in Yellow Ochre Light and Other Paintings 4 April - 4 May 2024 Figures in Yellow Ochre Light and Other Paintings In Antoine Watteau’s nocturnal painting L’Amour au Théâtre Italien*, a close circle of costumed commedia dell’arte performers is gathered around a lantern held aloft by one of their number - Mezzetino or Brighella - to the right of the composition. Over to... Read more -
Stephen Loughman
Our Elaborate Plans 7 - 30 March 2024 Stephen Loughman's new exhibition Our Elaborate Plans utilizes imagery from commercial films as source material. Loughman reformats and recontextualizes these images by slowing them down during the painting process, giving them new meanings. Although most of the scenes used last barely a second and may appear banal, when isolated, this... Read more -
Lauren Conway
In The Window - Things Changed 7 - 30 March 2024 To coincide with Our Elaborate Plans by Stephen Loughman, the gallery is pleased to present Things Changed by Lauren Conway, in our window space. Read more -
Sinead Ni Mhaonaigh
Dwelling 8 February - 2 March 2024 Dwelling The concept of home, a place of dwelling, is a complex one. What constituents a home and how it is conceived is informed, if indeed not burdened, both objectively and subjectively, by history, culture, psychology, and identity politics. In this context, Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh’s new series titled Dwelling is... Read more -
Olivia O'Dwyer
HomeBird 11 January - 3 February 2024 Olivia O’Dwyer HomeBird Not all men n are called to be hermits, but all men need enough silence and solitude in their lives to enable the deep inner voice of their own true self to be heard at least occasionally. – Thomas Merton When, some time ago, a friend declared... Read more -
Michael Boran
Near And Far Away 30 November - 22 December 2023 Photography is a strange medium, its raw materials are Light and Time. - John Berger In this new body of work Michael Boran examines objects and scenes up close and from a distance. A micro and macrocosmos of domestic interiors and local wanderings which also include gazing at the moons... Read more -
Richard Proffitt
A Crystal Split the Yolk on Paradise Lane 2 - 25 November 2023 It was hot that summer Rays of sunshine reflected off shattered glass Prismatic shards, crayon colours, rainbows Bubble-gum ice-pops Electric blue liquid Chewed plastic tube Torn. Bent. Bitten Dribbling 99 Yankee Doodle chime ringing out Hot smoke stuttering speech Blades of cut grass Sticky hands Scared dog Alleyway Kicked-in hoarding... Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
Sounding of Silhouettes 4 - 28 October 2023 The gallery is pleased to present Sounding of Silhouettes, a solo exhibition by Diana Copperwhite of watercolours and small paintings from her Notes on Lightness, Notes on Darkness Series. 'The surfeit of visual information that confronts everyone in the digital era, afflicts and affects visual artists as much as anyone... Read more -
Mark Swords
"I MUST WALK TOWARD OREGON" 7 - 30 September 2023 The title I must walk toward Oregon comes from Walking, a lecture by Henry David Thoreau. Amongst other things the lecture extols the virtues of a slow and sustained movement through the natural environment. I have read that one possible subtext to Walking was an advocacy for the abolition of... Read more -
Emily Miller
"My eyes were formed there" 10 August - 2 September 2023 Accompanying text written by Rayne Booth Because that settlement and that land were my first and for many years my only real knowledge of this planet, in some profound way they remain my world, my way of viewing. My eyes were formed there. Towns like ours, set in a sea... Read more -
Joanne Hynes
what we carry with us 20 July - 5 August 2023 What do we leave behind, take forward, carry with us? Through a selection of clothing, objects and text, Joanne Hynes explores fictional, autobiographical and creative meaning in gesture, process, and materiality. This first solo exhibition is formed around extracts from Hynes’s fictional essays, prose, poetry and short stories. Hynes carries... Read more -
PAUL MC KINLEY
POMEGRANATE 22 June - 15 July 2023 Afghanistan, a dry and mountainous country with intermittent fertile valleys, its rugged terrain once populated by nomadic tribes, is often seen in the West as a desolate and landlocked site of conflict and oppression. Although now considered to be peripheral and marginalised, in the past it was central to the... Read more -
SHEILA RENNICK
Bang It Out 25 May - 17 June 2023 Sheilla Rennick’s works are piled heavily with a range of paradoxes and oxymorons. With humour and hints of pathos, she creates what could be described as pitiful scenes where the protagonists jostle in their own personal turmoil and grapple to exist within the realms they inhabit. The works are vistas... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran
Goddesses & Icons 27 April - 20 May 2023 Kevin Kavanagh presents Goddesses & Icons - a new solo show of paintings by Margaret Corcoran running from 27 April to 20 May 2023. The works are joyous and beautifully colourful depicting iconic creatives and mythological females. Both Corcoran’s watercolours and oils are delightfully jewel-like in quality transporting the viewer... Read more -
Robert Armstrong
After mountains, more mountains 30 March - 22 April 2023 Robert Armstrong | After mountains, more mountains | Text by Aidan Dunne For a certain kind of painter, painting is a process. Of course, making a painting is necessarily a process, usually one that delivers a finished work. But for some, perhaps many painters, the finished work is less a... Read more -
Gemma Browne
Wallflowers 2 - 25 March 2023 Gemma Browne | Wallflowers | 02 – 25 March 2023 Text written by Sinéad Gleeson As the world ground to a halt in 2020, artist Gemma Browne was determined to keep moving. In an effort to stick to routines – and bound by a 2km limit – she walked the... Read more -
Elaine Byrne
Common Work 2 - 25 February 2023 Elaine Byrne | Common Work | 2 – 25th February 2023 Text by Kari Conte, Independent curator Common Work assembles a series of videos, photographs, and sculptures and a performance developed from Elaine Byrne’s nearly decade-long Arctic research, particularly in Svalbard. It materializes her fieldwork in this most northern inhabitable... Read more -
Eleanor McCaughey
Forget your cares, sow your wild oats, sin is a wonderful disease 5 - 28 January 2023 Text written by Saša Bogojev No matter the intensity or the timing, a moment of deliverance carries a lot of weight and significance. And for Eleanor McCaughey, it was such multiple experiences that conditioned the body of work she’s presenting at Kevin Kavanagh Gallery in Dublin from 5 th until... Read more -
ÖVERGÅNG
Robert Armstrong Anna Bjerger Petra Lindholm Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh Bella Rune Kathy Tynan 1 - 22 December 2022 The gallery is pleased to present Övergäng, featuring something old and something new by Robert Armstrong, Anna Bjerger, Petra Lindholm, Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh, Bella Rune and Kathy Tynan. Originally programmed for June 2020, the exhibition has been postponed twice due to the Global Pandemic. The initial concept has developed from... Read more -
Richard Proffitt | Online exhibition
to a wasted shimmer, lasting state | Online exhibition 18 November - 17 December 2022 Richard Proffitt | to a wasted shimmer, lasting state | 18th November - 17th December 2022 The spectral warping of paint in these works on paper creates shapes and timbres that barely function as descriptors and instead drift in and out of clarity, with flourishes that perforate soft layers of ambiguous background scenery.... Read more -
Stephanie Deady
Measure for Measure 3 - 26 November 2022 Text written by Aidan Dunne Historically, in western painting, there is an art of drama and spectacle, and there is an art of quietness. The extrovert and the introvert. Stirring, dramatic events and moments of inner revelation. Stephanie Deady’s work is aligned with the latter, with interior life. As... Read more -
Olivia O'Dwyer | Online Exhibition
A Mind's Eye | Online Exhibition 17 October - 13 November 2022 Read more -
Vanessa Donoso Lopez
movements of immobile objects 6 - 29 October 2022 Text written by Cliodhna Shaffrey It’s simple isn’t it, to pick up stones? Take clumps of soil out of the earth, stand on land or in landscape, kneel, haunch low or sit and press a hand down, digging, digging into earth and pick up stones. Humans have collected stones for... Read more -
Sheila Rennick | Online Exhibition
Neon Orchids 20 September - 16 October 2022 SHEILA RENNICK | NEON ORCHIDS Sheila Rennick’s images are rooted in the context and culture they reference, so despite hints of satire and caricature there is a familiarity of these realities and worlds. In a series of drawings, with neon inks and gestural marks, Rennick’s cacophony of references include aspirational... Read more -
Cecilia Danell
Brush Lightly Through Fireweed Forests 8 September - 1 October 2022 Cecilia Danell's exhibition Brush Lightly Through Fireweed Forests encompasses large, hand-tufted rugs and paintings inspired by her own encounters with the landscape of the area in Sweden where she grew up. In her process based practice, research into landscape and the psychology of place is coupled with a strong interest... Read more -
David Tully
THE ROCK 18 August - 3 September 2022 Read more -
Lesley-Ann O'Connell
Yellow, Pink and Blue Horizon 21 July - 13 August 2022 Dreamboat A text inspired by the paintings of Lesley-Ann O'Connell by Barry Kehoe There are three colours that are ever present in the palette choice of Lesley-Ann O'Connell. Cerulean Blue, Magenta and Cadmium Yellow. Each colour has its own set of particular characteristics and in her work they form... Read more -
Kathy Tynan
Soft Fascination 23 June - 16 July 2022 Text written by Benjamin Stafford Heart of a Dog (with apologies to Laurie Anderson) I love her. And I know she loves me too. There are others of course, there always are – some of them are around so often! - but it doesn’t worry me. We have been through... Read more -
Geraldine O'Neill
Solastalgia 26 May - 18 June 2022 Text by Angela Griffith The term solastalgia is a hybrid of the words ‘solace’ and ‘nostalgia’ and was coined by Australian philosopher Glenn Albrecht. Albrecht sought to recognise and encapsulate how current changes in the world’s ecosystem impacts on people’s physical and mental wellbeing, namely the distress felt as... Read more -
Elaine Byrne | Online exhibition
Othered 12 May - 11 June 2022 The title of this collection of unique edition photographs points to the photographs altered, or Othered, state. Each photograph has been manipulated by hand after the image has been printed making each unique and not reproducible. This approach is derived from a concept common in printing – that of the... Read more -
William O'Neill
Luminous Gatherings 28 April - 21 May 2022 Text by Ingrid Lyons ‘Not everything is as it seems, and not everything that seems is. Between being and seeming there is always a point of agreement, as if being and seeming were two inclined planes that converge and become one’. ― José Saramago, Blindness (1995) In Luminous Gatherings, William... Read more -
Salvatore of Lucan
Dead Present 31 March - 23 April 2022 'Hello, I'm Salvatore of Lucan and I am 28 years old now. 'Dead Present' is a show which starts on the left with me in work and goes right across to me as a blemmyae. There's me in the pub too and then me eating a takeaway afterwards. Then me... Read more -
Aileen Murphy
WET TALK 3 - 26 March 2022 Text written by Amelia Groom Antonio Banderas says that he didn’t speak any English when he was cast in his first English-language role, so he learned his lines phonetically. I thought about this when I came across a news article about some wild parrots in Sydney who had picked up... Read more -
SINÉAD NÍ MHAONAIGH
Struchtúr 3 - 26 February 2022 Notes On Structure | Written by Joanne Laws Within the vernacular of Irish architecture, these angular painted forms seem strangely familiar yet irredeemably distant. Gable silhouettes and steeply pitched roofs recall back-to-back suburban terraces, just as a ramshackle lean-tos and modular off-shoots channel the utility of country life. Neither formal... Read more -
Michael Lyons
The Age of Plastic 6 - 29 January 2022 Text written by Ingrid Lyons The Age of Plastic is an exhibition of new works made primarily during the last two years, as a response to the heightened and persistent media exposure that we have undergone. Whether to keep each other safe and follow announcements regarding the global pandemic, or... Read more -
Michael Coleman
"Works that have made an impression on me" 2 - 23 December 2021 More orange than pink I first encountered Michael Coleman’s paintings in the summer of 1989 when I worked as an EFL teacher in the grandly titled Academy of English Studies. Michael had his studio on the top floor and was manning the reception desk while his enormous monochrome paintings adorned... Read more -
Ella de Burca | Online Exhibition
Wolfroy Goes to Town, 18 November - 18 December 2021 ELLA DE BURCA WOLFROY GOES TO TOWN, Ella has created a series of images from watercolour, eggshells and pulverised petals. The images serve as devotions to the flowers growing in her garden. Ella's research into their medicinal healing properties overlaps with her research into the mystical properties of viewer interpretation.... Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
Vanishing Apertures 4 - 27 November 2021 On Blurring Text written by Sue Rainsford Aperture: an opening which allows for the passage of light. As it widens and narrows inside a camera lens or human eye, rays scatter thin as mist or gather thickly in a luminous cone. Expansion, recession. In the movement between them, blinking discrepancies... Read more -
Simon Watson
Portrait of a House 14 - 30 October 2021 In Portrait of a House, Watson explores an eighteenth-century Georgian house on Dublin’s storied Henrietta Street. The house has a history of transformation, from the grand city home of wealthy merchants to the inner-city tenement dwelling for the poverty stricken. In a gentle Proustian fashion, the house reveals a quiet... Read more -
Gemma Browne | Online Exhibition
Lady-Salad Days 30 September - 31 October 2021 Lady-Salad Days The experience of artist as mother and the invisibility that comes with this changing role informs some of the impetus of the work alongside more universal feminist themes. While the domestic space has seen renewed focus in recent times due to lockdown, the feeling of being locked... Read more -
Ulrich Vogl
Two Stars Missing 16 September - 9 October 2021 The starting point of Ulrich Vogl’s work is his fascination with everyday objects and places, their stories and moods. He either integrates them unchanged, reshapes them, or leaves them only as references. These objects are always part of a playful, experimental and conceptual process, at the end of which the... Read more -
Richard Proffitt
A Memory Circular 19 August - 11 September 2021 Richard Proffitt’s practice may best be described as evincing a preoccupation with the interspersal of the esoteric, the phenomenological and the darkly fantastical amid the everyday, and often unremarkable, artifacts of childhood and adolescent experience. We observe the conflict, and ultimate coalescence, of these extremities as they are represented in... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh | Online Exhibition
Dúil 3 - 28 August 2021 Text by Niall MacMonagle Ní Mhaonaigh has always celebrated form and colour and she masters both in these recent works with characteristic energy and control. Here, in these oil on board paintings, Ní Mhaonaigh has taken her brush for a walk. The palette draws on her familiar, signature one: pale... Read more -
Stephen Loughman
three years later 15 July - 14 August 2021 Falling towers Jerusalem Athens Alexandria Vienna London Unreal -T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land, 1922 In the wake of 9/11 there abounded a profusion of conspiracy theories, almost all of which were predicated on the assertion that the Bush administration were involved in, or had advance knowledge of, the attacks.... Read more -
Sonia Shiel
THE DANGERS OF HAPPY 10 June - 10 July 2021 THE DANGERS OF HAPPY Sonia Shiel's paintings for The Dangers Of Happy depict the simplest of human endeavours - an adult climbs a tree with a child, neighbours navigate a large object between houses, somebody is arranging flowers. Fragility lurks in the urchin grey shapes, bare limbs, and uncanny translucencies... Read more -
Sheila Rennick
Screaming on Mute 6 May - 5 June 2021 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Screaming on Mute, an exhibition of new paintings by Sheila Rennick. Sheila Rennick’s paintings are curiously at home in a world of angry Brexit voters, Trump-supporting conspiracy theorists, anti-vaxers and climate change deniers. Curiously because they do not directly address any such people, they... Read more -
Kathy Tynan | Online Exhibition
Fresh Ruins 6 - 19 April 2021 Fresh Ruins: Text by Ingrid Lyons Kathy's paintings document her day-to-day life and thoughts; capturing vignettes that are part of her daily routine; moments from the quotidian that somehow sparkle with a truth of their own. Barely tangible, they are encouraged out through the medium of paint. This has been... Read more -
Robert Armstrong | Online Exhibition
Covideos & Covid Paintings 9 - 22 March 2021 During the COVID_19 Lockdowns Robert Armstrong made a series of short videos which he called Covideos. They were shot in his home in Henrietta Street, Dublin and surrounding area. They range from 1 to 4 minutes in duration and 20 of them were posted on Instagram and YouTube . Kevin... Read more -
Carlos Pesudo | Online Exhibition
Zero Space 13 February - 6 March 2021 This exhibition, which presents painting and video work, has as its interest in what happens in the most immediate and hermetic reality of the creation space. Carlos Pesudo uses the figure of the egg or 'zero space' as a metaphor for the isolation in which he finds himself in his... Read more -
Paul McKinley
Blume 1 December 2020 - 9 January 2021 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Blume, an exhibition of new paintings by Paul McKinley. Though very much a studio artist, Paul McKinley finds his source material outside the studio, and indeed outside of painting itself. His methods don’t change so much as they’re applied to different subjects and... Read more -
Dermot Seymour
A Covid border tangle 1 - 31 October 2020 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present A Covid border tangle, an exhibition of new paintings by Dermot Seymour. Due to current restrictions there will be no opening reception for this exhibition. Clearly puzzled by the artist’s priorities, a visitor to one of his exhibitions once enquired of Dermot Seymour: “Why... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran | Online Exhibition
Noli timere – do not be afraid 17 September - 17 October 2020 'These words, Noli Timere, texted from our poet Seamus Heaney to his wife before he died - has been a gift and comfort to me and also to the nation and the world. I found myself supported by these words on my own mothers passing in December - and again... Read more -
Robert Armstrong
Three Distances 3 - 26 September 2020 Meet the Artist from 2 - 7pm on Thursday 03 September. Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Three Distances, an exhibition of paintings by Robert Armstrong. In a famous episode of the sit-com Father Ted, the eponymous Ted tries to explain perspective in Western art to his intellectually challenged colleague... Read more -
Cecilia Danell
I set a Bait for the Unknown 6 - 29 August 2020 Cecilia Danell ’s paintings are organic, magically playful and densely rich; however, they are also curiously geometric and linear, working off layers of constructed plains and improvised riffs. The artist understands the weight of colours and their manual application. She has been experimenting with different coloured grounds, underpainting the canvas... Read more -
Gemma Browne
Queen of the Dusk 9 July - 1 August 2020 Reception Thursday Jul 09 at 6.00pm This will be a public opening with social distancing Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Queen of the Dusk , an exhibition of new work by Gemma Browne. Queen of the dusk is a show of quite, small paintings on canvas which... Read more -
Richard Proffitt | ONLINE EXHIBITION
EVERY LEAF WAS TURNING 24 June - 14 July 2020 Read more -
DIANA COPPERWHITE | ONLINE EXHIBITION
LOCKDOWN SERIES 3 - 17 June 2020 For our third online exhibition, we focus on Diana Copperewhite, like most artists the lockdown presented an opportunity for reflection on their practice and a break from the hustle and bustle of one’s daily life. More walking on the quiet streets of Dublin and though the empty parks early in... Read more -
CECILIA DANELL | ONLINE EXHIBITION
LOCKDOWN SERIES – NOTEBOOK 20 May - 2 June 2020 Read more -
VANESSA DONOSO LOPEZ | Online Exhibition
I WANNA BE A MANUPORT 5 - 19 May 2020 ‘AS THE OLDEST AND WISEST OF ALL LIFE FORMS, THEN, ROCKS ARE TO BE DEEPLY RESPECTED AS A CATEGORY BUT ESPECIALLY AS PERSONS. THEY ARE THE SOURCE OF ALL LIFE ON THE PLANET, AND THEY CONTINUE TO GENEROUSLY GIVE THEMSELVES FOR MAINTAINING ALL LIFE’ George Tinker This situation took us... Read more -
Gary Coyle
Dreaming Different Dreams 5 March - 27 June 2020 Reception Thursday 05th of March at 6pm. Dreaming Different Dreams will be extended and open to the public until June 27th. Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Dreaming Different Dreams, an exhibition of new work by Gary Coyle “What kind of Man am I, sitting at home, watching TV... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Teorainn 6 - 29 February 2020 Kevin Kavanagh is proud to present Teorainn, a new exhibition of paintings by Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh . Ní Mhaonaigh ’s paintings contain questions regarding the boundaries and limits of line, texture, colour and the substance of paint itself. This new series continues this inquiry, using a unique and constantly evolving... Read more -
Sean Lynch
A Murmur Repeated 9 January - 1 February 2020 Kevin Kavanagh presents A Murmur, Repeated, Sean Lynch's fourth solo exhibition at the gallery. Opening on Thursday January 9th with Sean Lynch and curator Brenda McParland in conversation at 6.15pm, followed by a reading in the gallery by award winning author Kevin Barry at 6.45pm and reception from 7-8pm.... Read more -
SILVER
25 Year Anniversary Show 20 November - 21 December 2019 To mark 25 years as a gallerist in Dublin, I have put together a special exhibition, SILVER. It is a personal selection of art works, each by an artist associated with the gallery and each, I feel, of exceptional quality. Over the years, it has been an honour and a... Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
Proto Fiction And The Sleep Of Reason 10 October - 9 November 2019 how things stand, at this very moment In Diana Copperwhite's exhibition Proto Fiction and the Sleep of Reason, her paintings appear to pulse, glow, dissolve, vibrate, radiate, to fade in and out of focus even as you look at them. Layers of scuffed, scraped and smeared colour partially obscure any... Read more -
Kathy Tynan
Green Like Now 5 - 28 September 2019 Kevin Kavanagh is proud to present Green Like Now, a solo exhibition of new paintings by Kathy Tynan opening 5pm Thursday 5th September. From Wednesday 11th to Sunday 15th September, Green Like Now will be transformed into a set for Pretty Feelings, a new play by Isadora Epstein written in... Read more -
High Day
Sean Lynch, Elaine Byrne, Mark Swords, MIck O'Dea, Richard Proffitt, AileenMurphy, Geraldine O'Neill 1 - 17 August 2019 Sean Lynch, Elaine Byrne, Mark Swords, MIck O'Dea, Richard Proffitt, AileenMurphy, Geraldine O'Neill High Day is a celebration of the accomplishments and diverse processes of a selection of gallery artists at varying stages of their careers. Incorporating a mixture of drawing, painting, sculpture, photography and collage, the exhibition hosts a... Read more -
David Quinn
Joyful Mysteries 4 - 27 July 2019 Kevin Kavanagh is proud to present Joyful Mysteries an exhibition of new paintings by David Quinn. Joyful Mysteries – Quinn’s first solo exhibition in almost 10 years, comprises a contemplative tone poem of paintings set in a world of crystalline light and detachment. As often with Quinn the point of... Read more -
Lesley-Ann O’Connell
Midnight Swim 6 - 29 June 2019 When you look at Lesley-Ann O'Connell's paintings, over time it becomes apparent that they are in flux, spatially and temporally. Nothing within them is static and instead moods drift over the canvas and furtive notions make a brisk appearance. The titles of the work refer to atmospheric vignettes that conjure... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran
An Enquiry II 9 May - 1 June 2019 Kevin Kavanagh, Dublin is proud to present An Enquiry II by Margaret Corcoran. This exhibition is part of a Production Residency at IMMA in collaboration with Kevin Kavanagh Dublin. Corcoran re-enters and elaborates on the themes from an earlier series; The Enquiry Series painted in 2002. In this earlier series,... Read more -
Sonia Shiel
How The Oyster Makes The Pearl 11 April - 4 May 2019 Kevin Kavanagh is proud to present How The Oyster Makes The Pearl, a solo show by Sonia Shiel. Sonia Shiel’s interdisciplinary practice combines key methodologies from art, law and theatre to imbue characteristics, autonomy and personal narratives in the inanimate objects and painted works that she creates. Playfully usurping the... Read more -
Michael Coleman
Still Life 14 March - 6 April 2019 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present MICHAEL COLEMANS STILL LIFE, an exhibition of paintings which opens Thursday 14th of March. We are delighted to be working with Michael again for the first time since his solo exhibition in 1997 at the Jo Rain Gallery in Temple Bar. Born in 1951,... Read more -
Robert Armstrong
Squeegee Paintings 7 February - 9 March 2019 “If I am forced to associate, I think of my pictures as explosive landscapes, worlds, and distances held on a flat surface”. – Helen Frankenthaler In his new paintings Robert Armstrong delights in the dripping, slipping, scraping, melding, oozing, brushing, and drying of oil paint on a heavily gessoed... Read more -
Cecilia Danell
Winter Wanderer 10 January - 2 February 2019 Cecilia Danell (b.1985) is a Swedish-born, Galway-based artist. Her current body of work is based on winter walks in the area surrounding her family farm in Sweden, where the experience of being in the landscape influences the paintings beyond the photographic source material. She walks and traces an environment that... Read more -
Alice Maher
Vox Materia 29 November - 22 December 2018 Alice Maher is one of Ireland’s most established and influential artists and yet despite the long familiarity of her work she hasn’t lost the ability to surprise and unsettle. Her art is always mutating, fresh and dynamic. This new installation, Vox Materia, continues her sustained interrogation into the aesthetic potential... Read more -
Mark Swords
Lost Highway Guy 2 - 24 November 2018 There is a song on “repeat play” in the studio. It is late. I am wallowing in my thoughts, my focus drifting between the music and my own ideas, surrounded by paintings. “…all alone and lost…” I am there, very much alone and must somehow use this time, make it... Read more -
Joe Scullion
As It Goes 4 - 27 October 2018 In As it Goes, interiors and exteriors merge, voids and forms are interchangeable and within the pictorial plane, perceptual slippages occur. Spatial boundaries assert and digress continually, creating an assemblage of fragmentary gestures that affirm a cohesive whole. These paintings celebrate dream logic and the capacity of images to describe... Read more -
Elaine Byrne
Borderline 6 - 29 September 2018 All photographic works, Hahnemuhle Fine Art Pearl 285gsm Prints framed and made using Ultra Chrome HDR pigment inks and UV protective spray. Why do nation-states desire walls? What do walls promise to secure, protect, contain or keep at bay? These are questions Elaine Byrne interrogates in her new work, borderline.... Read more -
Bounty
Diana Copperwhite & Aileen Murphy 9 August - 1 September 2018 Bounty comprises recent work by Diana Copperwhite and Aileen Murphy. The impetus to show the work side by side has arisen from the mutual admiration and affinities that exist between the two artists in their subject matter and their handling of the medium of paint. Both Copperwhite and Murphy create... Read more -
Island Life
Summer Group Exhibition 5 July 2018 Sonia Shiel, Kathy Tynan, Marcel Vidal, Mark Swords, Salvatore of Lucan, Joe Scullion, Robert Armstrong, Julia Dubsky, Lesley-Ann O’Connell, Pat Byrne, Stephen Loughman, Cecilia Danell, William O’Neill and Stephanie Deady Island Life comprises work by artists who are making and showing paintings at the moment. It is intended as a celebration... Read more -
Mick O’Dea
Kilkenny Festival Portraits 7 - 30 June 2018 From 2015 -17 Mick O’Dea was visual artist-in-residence at Kilkenny Arts Festival. For this unique three-year project he painted daily oil portraits of leading Irish and international artists, performers, actors, musicians and writers taking part in the Festival, while also documenting performances with action sketches. An audience joined Mick in... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Achar 26 April - 26 May 2018 We again observe the complete preoccupation with paint itself, with the simple play of colours against one another. Many of the recent paintings pulled out from stacks that afternoon in Bray seemed to follow this logic, canvases filled to bursting with dragged daubs of complementary colours: swampy greens and starchy... Read more -
Vanessa Donoso Lopez
I shall change the way things are ordered 22 March - 21 April 2018 In Texture Notes , poet and performer Sawako Nakayasu writes ‘The pain of seeing something beautiful. Is layered as such, the first layer of it being thick, of substance, I can’t say which sort, but of being matter and matterful.’ Nakayasu provides us with a lexicon of sorts for Vanessa... Read more -
Paul McKinley
Elysian Fields 15 February - 16 March 2018 ‘Elysian Fields’ refers to an afterlife in Greek mythology, a place where the souls of gods and heroes as well as those associated with them would remain after death. Greece is a country dealing with mass displacement of people from war torn countries and though economically unstable, their contribution to... Read more -
Stephanie Deady
Primed Vision 11 January - 10 February 2018 Stephanie Deady works from photographs, found images and from memory to create paintings of her surroundings, both experienced and recalled. On wooden panels, the paintings depict part of Deady’s studio, the counter top in the kitchen of a friend’s house and the corner of a living room in Italy, among... Read more -
Ulrich Vogl
The nature of drifting 23 November - 23 December 2017 The Map Land lies in water; it is shadowed green. Shadows, or are they shallows, at its edges showing the line of long sea-weeded ledges where weeds hang to the simple blue from green. Or does the land lean down to lift the sea from under, drawing it unperturbed around... Read more -
Dermot Seymour
Hidden dips, Blind summits -The road to Brexitaria 19 October 2017 Read more -
Paul Nugent
Obscura 9 September - 14 October 2017 Asylum Chapel
Obscura | Paul Nugent | 14.09 – 14.10 2017
The Pitié-Salpêtrière Hospital is an institution in Paris that interned and treated patients deemed mentally ill by the state from the 17th century onwards. It was known for its poor living conditions and crude experiments. The Salpetriere in its current manifestation is a university hospital. Gaining notoriety as one of Europe’s largest insane asylums during the Belle Époque, the Salpêtrière became the sight of French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot’s famous Tuesday morning lectures.
These lectures were renowned for their theatrical presentations in which Charcot’s patients performed their conditions to crowds of spectators that included important physicians and neurologists as well as wealthy members of the public.
The spectacle of such events was driven by a morbid curiosity that also spurred the circus shows, travelling magicians and hypnotists of the same era. In fact it was noted that Charcot’s lectures were attended by the famous French stage actress, Sarah Bernhardt who purportedly took inspiration form the repertoire of gestures and intensity of performance presented by patients at the Salpêtrière. (Heroes and Legends of Fin-de-Siècle
France: Gender, Politics, and National Identity, Venita Datta, 2011 Cambridge University Press, p156).
Charcot initially believed that hysteria was a neurological disorder and throughout his career he searched for the ‘seat’ of hysteria
– hoping to find a physical location for the disorder. He later concluded that hysteria was a psychological disease. Using medical apparatus and hypnosis, Charcot and his contemporaries conducted
experiments on the - almost exclusively - female patients. During this time he had a number of patients whom he favoured and in the performance of his lectures, Charcot often relied on his more ‘experienced’ patients. Namely those who understood, and were cooperative in, the theatrical nature of the events. Patients such as Louise Augustine Gleizes and Marie ‘Blanche’ Wittmann became complicit in the performance of their condition in a way that transformed them into icons of their hysteria.
In many cases, Charcot’s patients became famous in their own right; Gleizes and Wittmann for example were well known hysterics in the 19th century and became the subject of novels, newspaper articles and works of art. Jane Avril was a dancer and hysteric who became the muse of Toulouse-Lautrec. In her book, Medical Muses: Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century Paris, Asti Hustvedt details rivalries that existed between the young women who hoped to achieve fame by performing in Charcot’s lectures.
Charcot, in his search for the seat of hysteria in the female body, employed what he deemed the most up to date technology to aid his research. He believed that the forensic use of the camera would allow him to locate and distil the essence of hysteria. However as photographic technology developed, the state, hospitals, Gendarmerie and the Académie des Beaux-Arts became complicit in a fiction. Art students, physicians and doctors often worked together with favoured subjects to create the most convincing iteration of the suspected condition. The photographs became increasingly staged and ornate, blurring the already delicate line between documentation and fabrication.
In his most recent series of paintings, Paul Nugent returns to iconography as it pertains to the history and architecture of the asylum chapel. During the 19th century, Charcot relied heavily on photography to decipher and archive cases of hysteria-a disease that no longer exists despite being suspected to affect more than half of all women during the 19th century. (Medical Muses: Hysteria in Nineteenth-Century Paris, Asti Hustvedt, 2012, Bloomsbury Press).
Throughout Obscura, Nugent responds to his photographic source material and the interior of the chapel by closely observing and depicting its interior – the site of the hysteric performances. Séance IV depicts an altar presided over by a statue of the Virgin Mary in her iconic pose, head at a gentle tilt, hands loosely by her side with palms facing upwards. A large painting, of which the subject matter is undecipherable, dominates the wall space of the chapel. In the repetition of these compositions, Nugent simultaneously clarifies and obscures certain details within the chapel to consider various aspects of its architecture. Within the series Nugent also directly references phases in the development of photography as a medium, including the inversion of negatives and the uniform colour of cyanotype.
This alludes to the manner in which the Camera was invested with the belief that it could shed light on the misunderstood phenomenon of hysteria. By creating an extensive archive, Charcot and his associates at the Salpêtrière hoped to find a common physical feature or expression that would help them to identify those that suffered from the condition. George Didi – Huberman in his book Invention of Hysteria, speaks about the ‘True Retina’, an emotionless gaze that presents the patient in the most neutral and objective manner
possible through meticulous documentation of the women. The use of this new technology was believed to provide an unprecedented insight into the condition.
In Obscura III, Nugent creates a painted illusion of the photographic image –as though blurred by motion or poor exposure, a trompe l'oeil that denies its medium specificity. However in Obscura I this illusion is shattered. The spatial element of the painting and the objects within it are jarred by the application of thick bars of glossy paint in the uniform Van Dyke brown of the composition.
These seemingly impulsive marks contrast with the controlled and nuanced application of paint that form the backdrop. Similarly in Hysteria the measured manner in which the surface has been applied appears to have been compromised by a sudden agitated gesture. The gesture however, is self- reflexive.
The works in Obscura consider the role of the camera in diagnosing and treating patients at the Salpêtrière. By referencing techniques in the development of photography, and in his depiction of various angles of the asylum chapel, Nugent considers the relationship between photography and painting to imply a presence or semblance of place associated with historical and institutional environments.
-Ingrid Lyons
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Richard Proffitt
Written in Water, Shone in Stone, Lost in Light 10 August - 9 September 2017 Written in Water, Shone in Stone, Lost in Light is comprised of work in various media - installation, painting, digital collage and audio, forming a constellation of thoughts and ideas that relate to perception and awareness. Richard Proffitt is interested in the transition between personally significant events and those that... Read more -
Atonal Supersound
Kathy Tynan 6 July - 5 August 2017 Kathy Tynan’s eye for idiosyncrasies and her ability to distil an essence from daily encounters lends her paintings a profundity that is interspersed with self-reflexive humour. Each painting captures a moment in which a feeling or mood prevails. In the making of these paintings, Tynan proffers a world in which... Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
Crooked Orbit 1 June - 1 July 2017 ‘As is well known, the word ‘orbit’ refers to a set route or path around a given point: we on earth orbit the sun, just as the moon orbits us. Perhaps less known, though, is that the word is etymologically coupled with a distinct sense of the optical: from a... Read more -
Sonia Shiel
Rectangle, a written thing 4 - 27 May 2017 Rectangle, a written thing, 2017, is presented in four ensembles. These painted works conjure theatrical tropes without motion, containing performative moments within the stasis and composition of painting. Such poles of action and inaction, recurring throughout the installation, are echoed in an accompanying script. This written thing provides a space... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran
Aspasia – An Influential Immigrant 20 April - 20 May 2017 Aspasia was an influential immigrant to Classical-era Athens. She was the lover of the statesman Pericles and yet famed in her own right as an intellectual. As an outsider to the culture she entered, she thrived despite its restrictive citizenship laws. Corcoran’s large, highly colourful canvases are bold and assertive,... Read more -
Geraldine O’Neill
Many-worlds interpretation… 16 February - 18 March 2017 The subjectivity of perception provides each individual with a measure of the world; the communication of these various measures defines reality. Each one of us is like an artist, continuously creating our own personal worldview often unaware of just how subjective it is. Heraclitus believed that the world was ‘one... Read more -
Kathlyn O'Brien
Altered Light 12 January - 11 February 2017 Kathlyn O'Brien makes detailed and idiosyncratic sculptures from a range of found and collected materials, often repurposing objects, salvaged and procured. Many of the structures appear shrine-like, maquettes that look like reliquaries to house treasured or sacred items. Altered Light presents a series of objects that have been transformed; they... Read more -
Slips and Glimpses
Robert Armstrong & Anna Bjerger 17 November - 17 December 2016 Painters have a complex relationship with their source material. While it provides them with vital information and can often stimulate certain illuminating reactions within them, it can also act as a self-imposed limit, which, once introduced, must be escaped from. Slips and Glimpses, an exhibition of new work by... Read more -
Stephen Loughman
WI 13 October - 12 November 2016 Kevin Kavanagh presents WI, an exhibition of new paintings by Stephen Loughman And did those feet in ancient time Walk upon England’s mountain green? And was the holy Lamb of God On England’s pleasant pastures seen? And did the countenance divine Shine forth upon our clouded hills? And was Jerusalem... Read more -
Nevan Lahart
Disguise The Limit 8 September - 8 October 2016 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Disguise the Limit, an exhibition of new work by Nevan Lahart. The paintings in Disguise the Limit are serenely beautiful. Lahart pictures the vast expanse of the sky; initially appearing as traditional skyscapes, this contextualisation is swiftly derailed by the inclusion of... Read more -
Ozymandias
Vogl, Scullion & McSweeney 4 August 2016 Read more -
Sean Lynch
Scrapyard Carnival 7 - 30 July 2016 Kevin Kavanagh presents Scrapyard Carnival, a new installation by Sean Lynch. As ever, Lynch’s new work evokes the role of narrative and allegory, this time spiraling out of an event in a scrapyard in Clondalkin, on the edge of Dublin City in 2011. There, a repossession company seized a BMW... Read more -
Alice Maher
The Glorious Maids of the Charnel House 2 June - 2 July 2016 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present The Glorious Maids of the Charnel House, an exhibition by Alice Maher. Alice Maher’s recent work represents a return to figuration with renewed passion in a series of nine large drawings. In The Glorious Maids of the Charnel House, she continues her... Read more -
Elaine Byrne
Whenceness 5 - 28 May 2016 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Whenceness, an exhibition by Elaine Byrne. Whenceness is comprised of two videos, Pure Codology and Rakoczy March developed during Byrne’s fellowship at the Whitney Independent Study programme in New York, alongside twenty-four new works on paper. Collectively the work deals with the intersection between... Read more -
Michael Boran
Through the Undergrowth 7 - 30 April 2016 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Through the Undergrowth , an exhibition of recent photographs by Michael Boran. Through the Undergrowth is comprised of photographs that relate to each other tangentially, their intention is ambiguous. Boran pictures towers, pylons, masts, plant stalks and monuments from a Piranesian vantage point... Read more -
Robert Ballagh
Who Fears to Speak of the Republic? 10 March - 2 April 2016 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present an exhibition by Robert Ballagh in response to the year-long commemorative celebration of 1916. Who Fears to Speak of the Republic? comprises an exhibition of prints as well as a mural, painted on site at the gallery. The longevity of Robert Ballagh’s career and... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Ardán 3 - 27 February 2016 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Ardán , an exhibition of recent paintings by Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh. ‘Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh’s paintings capture texture, surface and form within the realm of abstract painting. Her paintings are exquisitely rich and highly charged; having developed her own distinctive language with each body of... Read more -
Hands Laid On
Kathy Tynan & Aileen Murphy 7 - 30 January 2016 In response to the question ‘why paint?’ featured in the January 2014 issue of frieze magazine, artist Ellen Altfest specified, ‘Looking over a long time is like an attempt to merge with something outside of oneself. The dense accumulation of visual information, which is the product of this kind... Read more -
Only Connect
Ali Kirby | Christopher Mahon 5 - 8 January 2016 Read more -
Paul McKinley
Hanuman 19 November - 19 December 2015 In this exhibition of recent works Paul McKinley refers to the history and folklore of Sri Lanka to inform his paintings. Hanuman details a period of Sri Lankan history, focusing on the last days of a civil war that ended in 2009. In the grassy verges and lush thickets, guerilla... Read more -
Agnes Devlin
GREY. WHITE. KLEE 10 - 14 November 2015 Irish Design is a yearlong initiative that aims to raise the profile of Irish design by increasing awareness of the value of design in all aspects of life. The Kevin Kavanagh gallery, designed by architect Philip Crowe of MCO Projects, is one of the few purpose-built private galleries in Ireland.... Read more -
Paul Nugent
NIGHTSHADE 8 October - 7 November 2015 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present NIGHTSHADE, an exhibition of new work by Paul Nugent. NIGHTSHADE is a series of paintings that present a change of direction within Nugent’s practice. In previous works he has often painted lavish interiors in which objects chime and resonate in their surroundings. They tremor... Read more -
Oliver Comerford
The Longest Road 3 September - 3 October 2015 the longest road comprises an exhibition of recent paintings by Oliver Comerford in which the open road and the surrounding landscape furnishes a meditation on points of intersection between photography, film and painting. These small-scale paintings are fundamentally autobiographical in the sense that Comerford tends only to paint places that... Read more -
Tadhg McSweeney
Pictures from the Surface 9 July - 7 August 2015 All’s well that begins well and will have no end. With an airy lightness, seemingly brittle but with underlying strength and resilience, Tadhg McSweeney’s assemblages document an exploration of the world around us – it’s various landscapes and built environments. He explores boundaries between painting, sculpture and installation with a... Read more -
Sonia Shiel
Here, while the bees are sleeping 30 April - 30 May 2015 Sonia Shiel’s highly imaginative mode of representational painting references the art historical lexicon of painting – early Flemish, romanticism, portraiture, surrealism and yet creates work that is distinctively her own style. The works are wilfully eccentric and play with the lines between truth and fiction. Her use of a multitude... Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
A Million and One Things Under the Sun 2 - 25 April 2015 'Copperwhite’s paintings follow a logic of their own, they are recycled and they grow out of one another by remaining susceptible to the materiality of paint. She often interjects with obstacles that she brings to bare on the paintings in a way that encourages them to define their autonomy. This... Read more -
I SEE A DARKNESS
Eleanor Duffin | Lorraine Neeson | Paul Nugent | Niamh O'Malley | Nicky Teegan 20 February - 14 March 2015 Read more -
Richard Proffitt
Wild Cries of Ha-Ha 8 January - 6 February 2015 Wild Cries of Ha-Ha is the translated name of one of the eight great charnel grounds described in Hindu and Buddhist spiritual texts. They are places of transformation, where the living and the dead communicate, populated by shamans, roaming spirits and corpses. These extremely sacred sites are feared and opposed... Read more -
Dermot Seymour
Fliskmahaigo 20 November - 20 December 2014 ‘Contemporary politics is the whim of man promulgated through propaganda of imagery and symbolism. In this manner society has been provided with a new gospel for the faithful that positions questioning and interrogation as part of a dissident heterodoxy. Herein we find Dermot Seymour’s current exhibition,Fliskmahaigo. Seymour’s paintings draw upon... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran
The Abundance 4 September - 4 October 2014 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present The Abundance by Margaret Corcoran. This exhibition features new works from her solo show Return to Cythera which was featured earlier this year at The Solstice Arts Centre, Navan. ‘Margaret Corcoran is known for her lively engagement with the western painting tradition. Her 2002... Read more -
Ruth E. Lyons
The Pinking 7 - 30 August 2014 When the sky is lit up with the pink shades of sunrise or sunset the world is awakened to the signal of day approaching or night falling. But if one had just awoken and seen the pinking of the sky they could easily be confused as to what time of... Read more -
Instant Crush
A collection of works celebrating twenty years in business 3 July - 2 August 2014 Read more -
Inside the Palace
Diana Copperwhite | Danny Ralph 6 June 2014 Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Contours 1 - 23 May 2014 Speaking recently about the power of painting, the American art critic Peter Schjeldahl noted: “… there’s something irreducible about a rectangular surface covered with marks that are all absolutely on purpose and made of physical stuff like we are. When it’s good, it demands – and allows – the highest... Read more -
Mark Swords
The Hinterlands 27 March - 26 April 2014 The Hinterlands brings together a body of disparate artworks from 2009 to the present day. This work has not been made with any single unifying theme or goal in mind. The individual pieces that comprise The Hinterlands might best be described as a series of potential answers to seemingly random... Read more -
Ulrich Vogl
Of clouds and strings 20 February - 22 March 2014 Ulrich Vogl’s most recent body of work focuses on sculptures that are – either in themselves or in their projection – films. Like in previous works Vogl uses movement, light and shadow to capture a suspension of reality and space. Among the sculptures in of clouds and strings is the... Read more -
Robert Armstrong
Assumptions 16 January - 15 February 2014 The title of Robert Armstrong’s exhibition of new paintings refers to his version of The Assumption of the Virgin, a Nicolas Poussin painting from 1650. Nonetheless, it cannot be assumed that the ascension into heaven of the Virgin Mary after her death is in any significant way the subject of... Read more -
McSweeney & Nisenbaum
Aliza Nisenbaum | Tadhg McSweeney 7 - 30 November 2013 Read more -
Conor Mary Foy
ADIAPHORA 30 October - 2 November 2013 Adiaphora: a philosophy that signifies things outside of the moral law, i.e. actions, pursuits that are not sanctioned or forbidden, but indifferent. The idea of indifference however is not simply the notion of not being one or the other, but it is the nature of not interested in one or... Read more -
All Dayer
Aoibheann Greenan | Richard Proffitt | Seamus Harahan | Stephen Loughman 12 - 21 September 2013 Curated by Aoife Tunney All Dayer brings together artists and musicians to embrace a commitment to the potential of new belief systems. The origins of Northern Soul came from the independent and lesser known producers of soul music, and this show reflects an independent faith in counter culture and the... Read more -
Vanessa Donoso Lopez
A Painful Excess of Pleasure 6 September 2013 We move and displace ourselves from the moment we are born. We try to identify with objects from an early age, in order to make a connection between our inner reality and the world outside of us. ( 1) When an individual displaces themselves to an unknown geographic space, deliberately... Read more -
COEXIST
Gerard Byrne | Amanda Coogan | John Gerrard | Nevan Lahart | Sean Lynch | Ailbhe Ní Bhriain 8 August - 7 September 2013 Curated by Eamonn Maxwell Coexist is an exhibition that explores hidden practice in contemporary art making, namely the role of the studio development, expressed through works on paper. The artists in the exhibition are best known for other practice – performance, film and sculpture – and have never, or very... Read more -
Adam May
Scheme of Things 4 - 27 July 2013 Read more -
Selective Perspectives
Robert Armstrong | Christine Frerichs | Paul Housley | Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh | Aliza Nisenbaum | Danny Rolph | Sonia Shiel 30 May - 27 June 2013 Robert Armstrong(b. 1953) Lives and works in Dublin.“Armstrong’s paintings re-order the fragments of a disorientated image culture. They attempt to penetrate through multiple layers of appearance, offering an incidental practice of looking in which, as T.J. Clark proposes in relation to Poussin, the image, “breaks up, recystallizes, fragments again, persists... Read more -
Stephen Loughman
Interiors 25 April - 25 May 2013 Stephen Loughman’s latest exhibition takes it’s title from Woody Allen’s 1978 film, “Interiors” which is considered to be heavily influenced by the work of Ingmar Bergman. Bergman’s films such as “Winter Light”, “Cries and Whispers”, “Fanny and Alexander” and “Scenes from a Marriage”, are the source for the paintings in... Read more -
Paul McKinley
Operation Turquoise 21 March - 20 April 2013 When Francisco Goya etched Yo Lo Vi across the bottom of one of the harrowing images from his Disasters of War series (1810-12), he was making a declaration about the primacy of presence in the authenticity of narrative. “I saw it”, says Goya, therefore you must accept this as truth.... Read more -
Nevan Lahart
The Most Conservative Game in Town 14 February - 23 March 2013 Lahart graduated in 2003 with an MA in Virtual Realities from the National College of Art and Design, Dublin. Upcoming Shows: Gothenburg Biennial 2013, Measures of Saving the World _ Part 1< rotor > Graz, Austria., To Have and Have Not, HALLE 14 Leipzig , ACC Galerie Weimar, COEXIST, Kevin... Read more -
Elaine Byrne
RAUM 10 January - 9 February 2013 “Man’s living needs are simple. They become complicated and hypocritical only as a result of artificial stimulations – in architecture as elsewhere. Honest building can be done in wood, mud and stone, just as dishonest building can be done with alpha glass and beta aluminum” Extract from ‘Pseudo-functionlism in Modern... Read more -
Roxana Manouchehri
Enigma 6 December 2012 - 14 January 2013 Kevin Kavanagh gallery is pleased to present this exhibition in collaboration with the Assar Art Gallery in Tehran. Leonardo da Vinci, the original Renaissance man, was a prolific polymath whose enduring contributions to contemporary world culture, half a millennium after his death, include the most famous portrait ever painted, the... Read more -
New Paintings
Anna Bjerger | Oliver Comerford | Diana Copperwhite 22 November - 22 December 2012 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present new paintings by Anna Bjerger(SWE), Oliver Comerford(IE) and Diana Copperwhite(IE). “Anna Bjerger paints heartbreaking utopias from magazine clippings. Filled with breezy landscapes and loose limbed figures, her work evokes the summer vacation version of Matisse’s Cote d’Azur. Her pictures pit ordinary life against extraordinary... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Eatramh 18 October - 17 November 2012 We navigate spatial plains not with sight alone but through a combination of our exteroceptive senses in order to position ourselves within the known world. In keeping with this logic, we must also apply the sense of such senses to our deconstruction of introspective and/or imagined space. Within Ní Mhaoghnaigh’s... Read more -
Geraldine O’Neill
Reciprocal Space 13 September 2012 There is a humorous irony to these works which are so saturated in symbolism they cease to be about any singular narrative or at least from any one perspective. The physical canvases are themselves paradoxes, questioning their own nature within the systems they depict. The segmented layers of foreground and... Read more -
The Temple of Psychic Youth
Miranda Blennerhassett | Dorje de Burgh | M&E | Oisín Byrne & Patrick Hough | Mark Durkan | Jim Fitzpatrick | Elaine Reynolds | Jonah King | Michael Ashur 11 August - 8 September 2012 Curated by Pádraic E. Moore By perception we generally mean what the body is able to perceive; that is, the information discerned by the body of the world exterior to it. To be perceived, then, a sensation must pass through the body by means of a sensory organ - be... Read more -
Mark Swords
Mosaic 31 July - 4 August 2012 Book launch and exhibition by Mark Swords. Tesserae is a term for the individual units which together comprise a mosaic. The individual artworks in Mark Swords’ recent work could be viewed as tesserae. They amount to a diverse collection of objects and a varied approach to art making. The sum... Read more -
Gemma Browne
Forever Girls and Boys 5 - 28 July 2012 `I`m young as morning and fresh as dew`- Maya Angelou Forever Girls and Boys projects a world inhabited by children, ranging from middle childhood to pre-teen. Browne has previously appropriated imagery of young females from fashion magazines or imagery of dolls; for this series, the source of choice is childrenswear... Read more -
Gary Coyle
Hello Darkness 31 May 2012 “ It might be better to stop talking about the sublime completely seeing that the term has been corrupted beyond recognition by the mumbo jumbo of the high priests of art religion” Theodore Adorno. Hello Darkness has taken up where Gary Coyle last left off. Returning to familiar territory (South... Read more -
Mick O'Dea
Trouble 26 April - 26 May 2012 Read more -
Sean Lynch
Dear JJ, I read with interest 22 March - 21 April 2012 The Kevin Kavanagh Gallery presents Sean Lynch’s second solo exhibition at the gallery, consisting of five artworks involving photography, slide projection, sculpture and a freely distributed publication. A story can be told and described so many times until it begins to narrow down to a particular narrative and content. Lynch... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran
How to Spend it – Love, Time and the Universe 16 February - 17 March 2012 Read more -
Sonia Shiel
The Human Race 12 January - 11 February 2012 Sonia Shiel’s installations, often composed of paintings, sculpture and video, explore the propensity of Art to be effective in the real world, while pitching mankind’s most earnest endeavours against their odd. For her first solo show at the Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Shiel will present The Human Race as a contest... Read more -
Preview 2012
Stephen Loughman, Vanessa Donoso Lopez, Ulrich Vogl, Dermot Seymour, Sean Lynch, Geraldine O’Neill, Sinead Ni Mhaonaigh, Diana Copperwhite, Paul McKinley, Mick O’Dea, Gary Coyle, Oliver Comerford, Mark Swords, Margaret Corcoran, Paul Nugent, Elaine Byrne, 20 December 2011 - 6 January 2012 Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
An Island from the Day Before 6 October - 10 November 2011 “Copperwhite’s work focuses on how the human psyche processes information, and looks at the mechanisms of how we formulate what is real. With her work, she is fully aware that such realities may only hold validity for an instant, and that we are constantly processing and changing what we logically... Read more -
Ulrich Vogl
Dunkle Kammer 4 September - 1 October 2011 Read more -
Eamonn O'Doherty
Drawings and Maquettes for Sculpture and Other Small Works from 1960 to Present 18 - 31 August 2011 Read more -
Vanessa Donoso Lopez
Grande, feliz e invencible 30 June - 23 July 2011 The Spanish Armada is for us, Spaniards “La gran y felic ísima Armada which, ironically translates to the great and very happy armada. This super happy Armada was a fleet of about 130 ships that sailed form Lisbon in August 1588 with the purpose of escorting an army from Flanders... Read more -
Mark McGreevy
Bundle View 2 - 25 June 2011 Mark McGreevy’s paintings are built in such a way that there is no clear approach to how they are constructed, drawings are made from several initial sources which are then developed through repeated addition and erasure, this continues until they have met a certain narrative that has previously been set... Read more -
Mark O'Kelly
Figure of 8 7 - 30 April 2011 When I am alone, it is not I who am there, and it is not from you that I stay away, or from others, or from the world. I am not the subject to whom this impression of solitude would come ― this awareness of my limits; it is not... Read more -
Parallel Lines
Michael Boran & Igor Eskinja 10 March - 2 April 2011 Parallel Lines features two independent projects, separately conceived by Michael Boran and Igor Eskinja whose works are connected conceptually and are presented together for this exhibition at Kevin Kavanagh. As in his previous work, Boran is still interested in the notion of micro and macro cosmos, that allow glimpses of... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Untitled 3 - 26 February 2011 Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh ‘s untitled series explores liminal space, that is the intervening spaces or interstices between objects and forms. Through this exhibition, spaces are presented with varying degrees of density. The exploration of painting in these works is spare, pared down and presented with a dramatic use of colour.... Read more -
Paul McKinley
CANADA 6 - 29 January 2011 Fergus Feehily in conversation with Paul McKinley on Saturday 8th January at 12.00 pm In ‘Canada’, Paul McKinley’s exhibition of new work explores the notion of landscape and how it is mediated over time, i.e. History. His previous work concerned itself with the public parks cape and personal experiences of... Read more -
Geraldine O’Neil
Horopter 2 - 23 December 2010 Dr. Yvonne Scott in conversation with Geraldine O’Neill has been postponed due to the weather conditions until Saturday 18th at 12 pm.O’Neill’s work is centred on the notion of still life. Her works interweave references from across the spectrum of visual culture, kitsch, fine art, child art, the overlooked and... Read more -
Building Sights
Robert Armstrong | Tadhg McSweeney | Mark Swords 4 - 27 November 2010 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present Building Sights. An exhibition of new work featuring Robert Armstrong, Tadhg McSweeney & Mark Swords For me this part is interesting cause this is the part where I’m like building, you know? I’m building the work from the get-go, like from the beginning. You... Read more -
Gemma Browne | Margaret Corcoran | Vanessa Donoso Lopez
14 - 30 October 2010 Gemma Browne researches the characters which are plucked from fashion magazine photo stories. Though the photos might show particular stories, the use of coloured pencils, markers and watercolours to create them, add a more complex layer of mixed emotion and goings-on! What is really happening with these characters? Undercurrent, her... Read more -
Amanda Coogan
The Yellow Series 24 September - 9 October 2010 Over the past two years Amanda Coogan has been working on a series of 'Yellow' performances; Yellow, The Yellow Mountain, The Fall, Cutpiece, Yellow-expanded , Eating Yellow, and finally, as part of the Ulster Bank Dublin Theatre Festival, Coogan will present the exploratory Yellow-Reperformed in collaboration with five other performers.... Read more -
Douglas White
Black Sun 2 - 18 September 2010 Curated by Elaine Byrne. Douglas White’s works are always rooted in the appropriation of found materials. There is “an inherent reality in them”, he says. This reality has attracted him since childhood. While in Belize for one of his exhibitions, he collected burst retread tyre fragments, and made a tree... Read more -
Something tells me it's all happening at the zoo
29 July - 28 August 2010 A group exhibition exploring animal imagery in contemporary art curated by Davey Moor and Kevin Kavanagh. Read more -
Regarding Painting
Sinéad ní Mhaonaigh | Paul Nugent | Esther Teichmann | Diana Copperwhite | Sarah Dwyer | Axel Sanson 1 - 24 July 2010 Read more -
Karin Brunnermeier
Liebesglück 10 - 26 June 2010 Sculpture | Installation | Video | Drawing Karin Brunnermeier’s practice, initially focusing on performance and literature, now incorporates video, installation and drawing. Brunnermeier has thoughtfully developed characters in which she plays out spiritual, psychic and physical dramas of the human condition in multilayered explorations spanning everyday life, family, childhood and... Read more -
David Quinn
Hungry Rock 15 May 2010 The “Hungry Rock” road from Coolaney to Skreen in Sligo is a winding route through the OX mountains and a locus terribilis in folk memory for condemning the unwary traveller to an eternal hunger, an apt title for a series of new paintings by David Quinn. His work to this... Read more -
Tadhg McSweeney
Portmanteau 15 April - 8 May 2010 Tadhg McSweeney's latest exhibition portmanteau takes as its starting point the idea of a collection. In this case, it is the artist's choice of objects that we must consider. In the painting A Different Scale , he enters the realm of the museum and is again beset with the difficulties... Read more -
Mick O'Dea
Black & Tan 11 March - 3 April 2010 Read more -
Dermot Seymour
Hibernium 4 February - 3 March 2010 Following on from Spatial Notions (2005) and eyed (2007), Dermot Seymour continues to delve into his fascination with gazes, whether they are emanating from animals or the pages of newspapers and magazines. It’s said that Seymour paints humans and animals in a realist style, but perhaps that’s being too picky.... Read more -
Sean Lynch
Deorean: Progress Report 7 January - 6 February 2010 Sean Lynch’s photographs, installations and publications continue to investigate and bring to attention understandings and representations of history. His first solo exhibition at the Kevin Kavanagh Gallery takes as a starting point the bankruptcy and subsequent aftermath of the DeLorean car factory, which operated in Dunmurry, outside Belfast, from 1981-2.... Read more -
Oliver Comerford
True Romance 5 - 28 November 2009 Kevin Kavanagh Gallery is delighted to present True Romance, an exhibition of new paintings by Oliver Comerford. The title of the exhibition derives from a 1996 painting by Comerford. In it we see, in the evening light, the outside of an art deco cinema in the West of Ireland, where... Read more -
Paul Nugent
Remembrance 17 October 2009 Kevin Kavanagh is pleased to present two exhibitions by Paul Nugent. Remembrance Part I was shown in April at Kerava Art Museum, Finland. Just as these paintings were slow to conceive and create, they necessitate measured, contemplative readings. References include the chapel at the Salpêtrière – the Paris prison, poorhouse... Read more -
Mark Swords
Flying Crooked 2 - 24 September 2009 Concurrently to this show, Mark is participating in the Royal Hibernian Academy’s Futures exhibition. RHA Gallagher Galleries, Ely Place, 4 – 27 September. Mark Swords’ current work displays an increasingly intuitive engagement with various approaches to painting and art making. His practice is well described as an instinctive and ill-disciplined... Read more -
OFFCENTRE
Nevan Lahart | George Young | Yuko Nasu 30 July - 29 August 2009 Fragile yet strong and bold, this exhibition examines how three separate oeuvres work in a space to suggest stretched tensions and boundaries both spatially and conceptually. Materials, light, display and place all work to make a unit, redolent of craft, experimentation and deftness, the ensemble examining notions of relationship in... Read more -
Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh
Paintings 2 July 2009 Paintings…the third show by Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh this year (after solo exhibitions in the Galway and Wexford Arts Centres), builds on an artistic practice as profound as it is prolific. Ní Mhaonaigh 2004 show Deoraíocht was loosely based on Padáic Ó Conaire’s ‘Scothscealtha’, in that it explored the spaces depicted... Read more -
Amanda Coogan
The Fall 25 June 2009 Amanda Coogan is to the forefront of Live Performance Art in Ireland. The Fall, her new performance, commissioned by the Manchester International Festival will be shown in the gallery on Thursday 25th June prior to her participation in the Marina Abramovic presents…exhibition at the Whitworth Gallery, Manchester. Over a four... Read more -
Stephen Loughman
Our Victory 29 May - 20 June 2009 As part of the In Conversation series, Stephen will be discussing his work with writer Stephen Walsh in the Gallery on Saturday 13 June at 12pm sharp. In his latest show, Stephen Loughman again uses ‘screen-grabs’ from films as his source material – predominantly those set during WWII. Together, the... Read more -
Diana Copperwhite
Perfect Near Miss 30 April - 23 May 2009 Diana Copperwhite was born in Ireland in 1969. She studied Fine Art Painting at Limerick School of Art & Design and the National College of Art and Design, Dublin. She completed her MFA at Winchester School of Art, Barcelona in 2000. She has exhibited widely in Ireland and abroad and... Read more -
Robert Armstrong
Blimp on the Horizon 2 - 25 April 2009 A public conversation between the artist and the critic Aidan Dunne will take place in the gallery Wednesday 8 April, 6.30pm sharp. The In Conversation series is organised by Elaine Byrne The floor, benches and tables in Robert Armstrong’s studio are stacked with books. One on Giotto, who lived between... Read more -
Ulrich Vogl
Gipfelstürmer 5 - 28 March 2009 Ulrich Vogl is a draftsman – a draftsman however, whose aim it is to project the art of drawing into other spheres.He deploys versatile techniques in order to emancipate the medium of drawing from its traditional boundaries. While Vogl’s overall theme would be the “extension of drawing”, his focus of... Read more -
Margaret Corcoran
The Garden 5 - 28 February 2009 Margaret Corcoran enters the landscape. Bold brushwork, strong colours, expressive marks describe and celebrate being. Flower gardens, cherry blossoms, castles, real but exotics locations allow a play of expectations, where we both enjoy and question what we are seeing. Moreover, the way paint is applied prevents any simple reading of... Read more -
Nevan Lahart
Ugly Lovely 8 - 31 January 2009 Press Release Blah Blah Blah Circumventing the narrative Gobble-d-gook, Gobble-d-gook, non linguistic forms of Yady, Yady, Ya. active forces that Blah Blah's subjective subliminal perception yiddy, yiddy, ya Contextualises the context of underlying structures That navigate empathetic analoguious analogues Ummmm…………………………………………………………………………Interesting Put simply, Nevan won't stray too far from flowers. Nevan... Read more -
Group Therapy
Michael Boran| Mark O’Kelly | Oliver Comerford | Mark Swords | Sinéad Ní Mhaonaigh | Tadhg McSweeney | Diana Copperwhite | Geraldine O’Neill | Stephen Loughman | Ulrich Vogl | Mick O’Dea| Karin Brunnermeier | Gary Coyle 28 November - 23 December 2008 Read more -
Mark O’Kelly
23 October - 22 November 2008 This exhibition marks a new direction in Mark O’Kelly’s practice, these works on paper offer original insight into O’Kelly’s conceptual practice as an artist. The show includes a trilogy of installed vitrine pieces, providing context for his extensive process of assimilation and deconstruction of printed material; including source, written and... Read more -
The world needs a narrative
Karin Brunnermeier | Henry Darger | Neil Farber | Tony Fitzpatrick | Michael Kalmbach | Basim Magdy | Jason McLean | Guy Richards Smit | Ken Solomon 26 September - 18 October 2008 Inaugural show The exhibition features works on paper by nine artists for whom the art of storytelling is central. The stories that they recount are extremely varied – from autobiographical, psychological and fantastical modern day fables to sociological commentary and political satire. Read more -
David Quinn
New Paintings 30 November 2007 - 5 January 2008 Read more