- Source: John Kirby (artist)
John Kirby (born 1949 in Liverpool, England) is a British artist known for his paintings exploring issues of gender, religion, sexuality, and race. His work has been compared to that of René Magritte, Balthus and Edward Hopper. Kirby has exhibited internationally and his work is held in several collections including the Tate Gallery, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and the Royal College of Art.
Early life
John Kirby was born in Liverpool in 1949 and grew up in Tuebrook. He was raised Irish Catholic and attended Saint Cecilia’s primary school as well as serving as an altar boy. When he was 16, Kirby left Liverpool to work in London as a shipping clerk and then traveled to Calcutta to help in a children’s home headed by Mother Teresa. After moving back to Liverpool, he trained as a social worker and then worked as a probation officer before enrolling in art school at the age of 33.
Career
Kirby trained at Central Saint Martins and the Royal College of Art in London. He has created a large body of work that includes both painting and sculpture and has cited his religious background as a strong influence, as well as the “ambiguity of sex and gender” in his work.
Kirby’s first major retrospective was held at the Walker Art Gallery in 2012, with more than fifty of his paintings and several of his sculptures. His work has been described as “bleak and lonely” and dominated by “solitary figures in strange worlds.”
Solo exhibitions
2014 Play Time, Flowers Cork Street, London
2013 John Kirby, Flowers New York
2012 The Living and the Dead, Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool
2011 Ghosts, Flowers Cork Street, London
2010 What Remains, Flowers East, London
2009 Home, Flowers Cork Street, London
2007 Being Alive, Flowers Cork Street, London
2006 Mixed Blood, Flowers, New York
2006 Il Polittico, Rome
2005 Absent Friends, Flowers Cork Street, London
2005 New prints and monotypes, Flowers Graphics, London
2003 Someone Else Flowers, New York
2002 Flowers Cork Street, London
2002 Paintings, Flowers West, Santa Monica, California
2000 New Prints and Monoprints, Flowers Graphics, London
2000 Il Polittico, Rome
1999 Lost Children, Flowers East, London
1998 Lost Children, Flowers West, Santa Monica, California
1997 In the Dark, Flowers East, London
1997 John Kirby, Il Polittico, Rome
1996 Art Basel 27, Switzerland
1995 The Company of Strangers, Ferens Art Gallery, Hull
1994 The Company of Strangers, Flowers East, London
1993 The Sign of the Cross, Angela Flowers Gallery, London
1992 Homeland, Flowers East, London
1991 Homeland, Lannon Cole Gallery, Chicago
1991 New York and Related Works, Flowers East, London
1989 Still Lives, Flowers East, London
1988 Other People's Lives, Angela Flowers (Ireland) Inc., Co.Cork
1988 Other People's Lives, Angela Flowers (Ireland) Inc., Co.Cork
1987 Artist of the Day, Angela Flowers Gallery, London
Public collections
Contemporary Art Society
Ferens Art Gallery, Hull
Irish Contemporary Art Society
John Hansard Gallery, University of Southampton
Royal College of Art Collection
Tate Gallery, London
University College of Wales, Aberystwyth
Victoria & Albert Museum
René Magritte Foundation, Brussels
In popular culture
Kirby's "Self Portrait 1987" is seen on-screen, and referenced by the character Armand Goldman (Robin Williams) in the 1996 film The Birdcage. In an early scene, Armand defends the fine art to his son, Val (Dan Futterman), who requests his father tone down the décor exclaiming "The Kirby? That's art!"
References
External links
Flowers Gallery, John Kirby
Artnet, John Kirby
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Jack Kirby
- Kirby Morrow
- Hulk
- Olivia Newton-John
- John Romita Sr.
- Bob Kane
- Alex Ross
- George Pérez
- Kenichi Ogata (pengisi suara)
- Argo (film 2012)
- John Kirby (artist)
- John Kirby
- John Carroll Kirby
- Kirby (surname)
- Jack Kirby
- Kirby Lauryen
- Kirby Awards
- Lady Miss Kier
- Vanessa Kirby
- Kirby (character)