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In the Autumn 22 edition of the Irish Arts Review
GRADUATES 2022: This year’s graduates demonstrate acuity and sensitivity when grappling with the complexities and instabilities of the contemporary
More graduate work: https://t.co/fla312YFkc
@NCAD_Dublin @LSADatTUS @BelfastSchArt
In the Autumn 22 edition of the Irish Arts Review
Artists on view
PRINCE OF TIDES: @johnnysull investigates painterly values and pitfalls with @Donald_Teskey, ahead of his mid-career survey at the @RHAGallery.
Donald Teskey, 'Decade', RHA: until 23 October
In the current edition of the Irish Arts Review, Summer 22:
Icons of Freedom
Felix M Larkin recalls the work of John Fergus O'Hea, the principal artist of the 'Weekly Freeman' cartoons in the 1880s in Ireland.
In the Summer 22 edition of the Irish Arts Review:
Tidal Attraction
Brian Fallon looks at the life and work of painter Richard Kingston and his late artistic rebirth, which produced hypnotic and visionary work
The Summer 22 edition of the @IrishArtsReview is on Sale tomorrow!
Ireland’s leading Visual Arts Magazine, the Irish Arts Review, proudly showcases Irish Art, Design, Crafts, Architecture, Photography, Sculpture and Heritage.
Buy / Subscribe or Gift https://t.co/uXkbSe6Wao
In the Spring 22 edition of the Irish Arts Review:
Art Lives: Frances Kelly (1908-2002)
SCATTERED FRACTIONS: Artist Frances Kelly didn’t aim for exact likenesses in her portraits of people or flowers, but rather for some inner, more abstract, significance, writes Hilary Pyle
Exhibitions: Thönnes at Graphic
@GraphicStudioG present works by Elke Thonnes whose current practice focuses on carborundum & monotype prints featuring seascapes of luminous blue. In contrast, her etchings focus on focal points of the Irish coastline & lakes - until 4 June
In the current edition of the Irish Arts Review, Spring 22
Exhibition
LEEWARDS: Peter Murray appraises a selection of paintings depicting maritime traffic from the @PortofCork Collection @CrawfordArtGall - until 28 August
Art exhibitions: In their new premises on Hume Street @galleryxdublin shows a second instalment of ‘The Gallery of Solar Plexus: The Liminal & the Marvellous’. Featuring Irish and international artists.
The Cabinet of Solar Plexus II: until 28 April
In the current edition of the @IrishArtsReview Winter 21.
IN UNISON: David Caron examines AE Child’s masterwork, his stained-glass window for the Dublin Unitarian Church on St Stephen’s Green
Winter 21 edition of the Irish Arts Review https://t.co/9dRkw17GYv