Link to hompage
  • Crawford Home
  • About the Crawford
  • Crawford Exhibitions
    • Current
    • Forthcoming
    • Recent
  • Research Centre
  • Permanent Collection
  • Crawford Gallery Tour
  • Crawford Gallery +
  • Crawford Education
  • Crawford History
    • Overview
    • Crawford Family
    • Architecture
    • 18th. Century Cork
    • Gibson Bequest
    • Crawford Art School
  • Crawford Press
  • Crawford Bookshop
  • Crawford Friends
  • Support the Gallery
  • Crawford Cafe
  • Contact Us

Permanent Collection

Paintings Sculpture Print Other Media watercolour Painting

Back

Gerard Dillon (1916-1971)

Gerald Dillon

Island People
c.1950
Irish School
oil on board
58.4 x 67.8 cm
150-P

 

Born in Belfast, Gerard Dillon left school at the age of fourteen and for seven years worked as a painter and decorator, mostly in London. About 1936 he started out as an artist, almost entirely self-taught. The outbreak of war in 1939 prevented his return to London, and over the next five years he developed as a painter in Dublin and Belfast. But despite a growing reputation, he had to return to London in 1944 to work on demolition gangs to restore his finances. After the war he became more successful, and in 1958 had the double honour of representing Ireland at the Guggenheim International, and Great Britain at the Pittsburg International Exhibition. He travelled widely in Europe and taught for brief periods in the London art schools. In 1968 he was back in Dublin, where he helped to design sets and costumes for O'Casey's Juno and the Paycock.

From the beginning of his career, Dillon's art portrayed the rural and folk life of Ireland, soon concentrating on Connemara and the Aran Islands. While this was the hunting ground of many Irish painters, Dillon's approach was different in several respects. He was interested more in representing the people and their customs than in celebrating the glories of the landscape. And unlike many of his peers, the nostalgia he felt for the declining way of life was not expressed in a traditional style but in a voice owing much to European Modernism. Indeed, Island People is a descendant of the movement that saw artists like Gauguin travel to remote, archaic cultures to express with modern naivete the untainted simplicity they saw there.

Island People has an intentional child-like vigour and simplicity which belie its theme - a natural arcadia visited by the alien culture of art. Very nicely, it captures the sense of separateness often felt by visitors to an enclosed world. Two ruddy-skinned islanders with patched knees peer after the painter trudging through the landscape, the road he walks like an envelope of space separating him from the vibrant life around. Here is a compendium of the world of the island, the rocks, the fields and cottages, the childlike cart on the strand to collect seaweed, the currachs and seagull, the hayricks and cattle in tiny fields laid out in the cloisonné style of Gauguin.
[WG]


Lit. - Kennedy, S B, 1991 / Murray, 1992 / White, 1994