- Source: James MacCarthy
James MacCarthy (Irish: Séamus MacCárṫaiġ; 5 March 1945 – 15 July 2019) was an Irish sculptor and painter. He is best known for his figurative work in bronze, as well as natural and marine subjects in copper and limestone. MacCarthy's sculpture range from small table top pieces to large public and corporate art works. Examples of his statues, monuments and plaques can be seen around Cork and Ireland, including a life-size bronze sculpture of Jack Lynch, Leader of Fianna Fáil and Irish Taoiseach, located in Blackpool, Cork.
MacCarthy's work has exhibited in many respected galleries in Ireland and the UK. His sculptural pieces also feature in collections such as RTÉ, The Arts Council, AIB, and The Office of Public Works; as well as private collections both in Ireland and abroad.
Early life and education
James MacCarthy was born in Dunmanway, West Cork, the second son of merchant Eugene Charles (Hugh) MacCarthy and Anna Connolly. Through his father MacCarthy descends from MacCarthy Clan Dermod of Kilcoe and MacCarthy Glas of Gleannacroim. From an early age MacCarthy showed an ability for drawing, painting and modelling and expressed an interest in attending art college. However, his father required that his son should firstly study baking at the Borough Polytechnic Institute, London. Afterwards, MacCarthy attended the National College of Art and Design (NCAD) in Dublin from 1968 – 1970 at a time when the campus was based at Kildare Street, Dublin. It was at NCAD that he was taught the principles of sculpture under the tuition of Domhnall Ó Murchadha.
Career
Early in his career MacCarthy worked solely in plaster with pieces varing in size from busts to half-size figures. An interest in ceramics and pottery led him to the Kilkenny Design workshop where his work looked to traditional Irish influences. MacCarthy remained in Kilkenny for a year, after which he set up a studio in Cork working primarily in ceramics. However, MacCarthy returned to figurative sculpture led by an inherent desire and attraction for creating expressive three-dimensional forms. MacCarthy also began bronze casting his work, which is a skilled process and labour-intensive, through mould making, and cast cleaning. Over a forty-year period MacCarthy was based out of his studio in Dunmanway where he worked on commissions and producing sculptural pieces for exhibition.
Sculpture
= Themes and style
=A major theme of MacCarthy's was to explore the physicality of the female figure, something which was carried through his career, whether in the subject's private moments bathing or energetically modeling on the catwalk. Equestrian and marine subjects, animals of the Irish countryside, as well as aspects of Irish life such as the fair day were also creatively investigated.
MacCarthy's appreciation of Cellini, Rodin, Remington and Stubbs can be seen in his early-period bronze sculpture with the work taking a robust and sensitive modelling manner, which was also underscored by the medium of clay. In later years MacCarthy switched to modelling in wax which allowed him a quicker and freer approach and he evolved a more mannerist style with the forms exaggerated often resulting in compositions that were unnaturally elegant. While primarily working in clay, and wax, MacCarthy also examined his core themes through the different mediums of limestone, copper and wood, with the latter two materials being used for more playful sculptural pieces.
= Commissions
=Alongside gallery work, MacCarthy undertook public and private commissions. Some of these works included:
Loughrea Uileann Piper, life-size male figure, bronze, Loughrea, Galway
Ballinasloe Horse Fair – Horse and Handler, life-size horse and male figure, bronze, Ballinasloe, Galway
Jack Lynch, B/L, T.D., An Taoiseach, life-size figure, bronze, Blackpool, Cork
Danno O'Mahony – World Champion Wrestler, life-size male figure, bronze, Ballydehob, Cork
Thomas Kent, life-size bust, bronze, Kent railway station, Cork
Heron in the Reeds, limestone and bronze, Inchy Bridge, Timoleague, Cork
Tony Reddin, low-relief portrait, bronze, Mullagh GAA Club, Galway
Buttevent to Doneraile – First Recorded Steeplechase, commemorative plaque, bronze, Buttevent, Cork
Painting
Primarily known as a sculptor, MacCarthy's output also extended to painting with his earliest work being conducted in this medium. While surrounding mountains and coastline of West Cork take prominence in MacCarthy's painting, the female figure also is a key subject either set within a location of landscape or interior. He painted primarily in oil or acrylic.
Gallery
References
External links
''Jack Lynch'', 2002, James Adam & Sons Ltd Fine Art Auctioneers and Valuers
Short biography on the Whyte's Arts Auction House website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kolonisasi Irlandia
- Puri Blarney
- Lytton Strachey
- Richard Overy
- Cinta Yunani
- Supernatural (seri televisi)
- Eóganachta
- Lee Van Cleef
- Batu Blarney
- Edward Irving
- James MacCarthy
- MacCarthy dynasty
- Jimmy MacCarthy
- James Mourilyan Tanner
- Denis Florence MacCarthy
- James de Barry, 4th Viscount Buttevant
- MacCarthy of Muskerry
- James McCarthy
- James Butler, 9th Earl of Ormond
- James Whitney (politician)