DUBLIN.- The National Gallery of Ireland is presenting a major show on Irish artist Roderic OConor (1860- 1940), from 18 July 28 October 2018. This is the first exhibition in over 30 years to explore OConors works across all media.
Roderic OConor & the Moderns: Between Paris and Pont-Aven assembles many of the most important paintings, drawings and etchings from his critical years in Paris and Brittany (1886- 1904), when he was a leading member of the Pont-Aven school of artists, and places him at the heart of the late 19th-century avant garde. The exhibition also includes seminal works by his illustrious contemporaries in Pont-Aven, including Paul Gauguin, Émile Bernard and Maurice Denis, and casts new light on OConors connections with Gauguin and Van Gogh.
Roderic OConor was born in Co. Roscommon, but moved to France, working between Paris and rural art colonies such as Grez and Pont-Aven. His cutting edge Post-Impressionist style in the early 1890s was unmatched by any of his English-speaking contemporaries. The exhibition curators have selected some of his very best works from the 1890s - many not previously seen in public drawn from public and private collections including Tate, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena. The exhibition celebrates O'Conor as an artist of international standing, operating on a European stage. The strength of his artistic connections is demonstrated for the first time by placing his work in context, alongside that of Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Émile Bernard, Maurice Denis, Paul Sérusier, and Armand Seguin.
The exhibition of over 60 major works offers a colourful array of French scenes charting the work of OConor and his contemporaries. It features Van Goghs Champ de blé aux bleuet (Wheatfield with Cornflowers), 1890, on loan from the Fondation Beyeler, Basel; Roderic OConors Field of Corn, Pont-Aven, 1892; and Paul Gauguins Bowl of Fruit and Tankard before a Window, c.1890, on loan from The National Gallery, London for the first time. It also includes significant works by the gifted Swiss artist Cuno Amiet, who worked alongside and was influenced by OConor.
Roderic OConor & the Moderns: Between Paris and Pont-Aven is arranged by theme: 1880s, New Discoveries and their Impact; 1890-3, Landscapes by OConor, Amiet and Van Gogh; 1893, Breton Peasants and Still Lifes by OConor and Amiet; 1894-1899, OConor and Gauguin; and 1900 and after, The Legacy of Pont-Aven. The artworks represent a period when OConor had already absorbed Impressionism and Pointillism and was seeking new challenges, leading to direct contact with Paul Gauguin and Theo van Gogh, art dealer and brother of Vincent.
OConor was among those who appreciated Van Goghs talent long before the Dutch artist gained mainstream recognition. New research by exhibition co-curator Jonathan Benington reveals OConors privileged early access to Van Goghs oeuvre at the Parisian flat of his brother Theo in 1890. Vincent died in July of that year, and only two months later, OConor attended a memorial exhibition, seeing Van Goghs work in quantity for the first time. Responding to Van Goghs exaggerated colours and expressive brushwork, OConor adapted his style to suit his own vision, painting alternating stripes of pure colour, intended to mix optically, like the dots of the pointillists. Over the next two years OConor experimented with the stripe and adopted it across all media, including ink drawings and etchings.
Included in the exhibition is Pierre Girieud's painting Homage to Gauguin, 1906, which features OConor as one of Gauguins ten most dedicated followers. During Gauguins last season in Brittany, he and OConor became friends. In May 1894, the pair were involved in a brawl with sailors in Concarneau, in which Gauguin broke his ankle. When Gauguin recovered, OConor allowed him to use a studio at the manor of Lezaven, and Gauguin based part of a picture on one of OConors drawings. Gauguin presented OConor with affectionately inscribed prints, and invited him to travel with him to the South Seas. OConor declined. OConor later began to use paint more fluidly, deploying warm colours reminiscent of Gauguins Tahitian landscapes.
The exhibition highlights O'Conor as a champion of the modern, passing on his innovations to artists with whom he collaborated. When young Swiss painter Cuno Amiet joined the Pont-Aven artists colony in May 1892 he was so impressed by OConors work that he began using stripes in his own paintings. Working together they created a remarkable body of work. Cuno Amiet returned to Switzerland in 1893, but evidence of this influence of OConors work remained discernible in his paintings beyond the turn of the century. In 1906, Amiet joined the German Expressionist group, Die Brücke.
O'Conor developed a distinctly personal style with a bold and expressive treatment of line and colour. With his practice of painting in expressive parallel lines (stripes) from 1892, he adapted a feature of Van Goghs late landscapes. The exhibition Roderic OConor & the Moderns: Between Paris and Pont-Aven presents an invaluable opportunity to examine the evolution of OConors style, side-by-side with the artists with whom he connected and collaborated, including Vincent Van Gogh, Paul Gauguin, Armand Seguin, Émile Bernard, Maurice Denis, Paul Sérusier, and particularly Cuno Amiet.
The exhibition is curated by Jonathan Benington, Manager, Victoria Art Gallery, Bath and Brendan Rooney, Head Curator, National Gallery of Ireland. A fully illustrated catalogue will accompany the exhibition.