DUBLIN.- Kerlin Gallery presents Over Our Heads the Hollow Seas Closed Up , a new exhibition of works by the celebrated Irish painter Brian Maguire (b. 1951). The exhibition opened on Thursday, 30 June, with a reception for the artist and continues until 20 August.
Since the very beginning of his career in the 1970s, Maguire has approached painting as an act of solidarity. He operates a truly engaged practice, compelled by the raw realities of humanitys violence against itself, and the potential for justice. Maguires preoccupations draw him to the margins of the art worldalternative space, prisons, womens shelters, and psychiatric institutionsmaking shows in traditional gallery and museum spaces something of a rarity.
The title of this new body of work, Over Our Heads the Hollow Seas Closed Up , is taken from Primo Levis If This Be a Man , in turn is quoting Dantes Inferno . In these paintings, Maguire directly confronts issues of human migration, displacement and dignity in the face of the current global unrest. This kind of work is difficult to accomplish, since narrators of stories of this kind, if they care, have a fear of exploiting grief as they walk the high wire between narrative and voyeurism. With Maguire, however, manipulation is entirely absent from the telling and painting, per se , is to the fore.
The paintings in this exhibition are some of Maguires most nuanced and ambitious to date, which he has crafted with larger brushes and thinned-down acrylic on canvas. He works slowly, using photographic sources, searching for that point where illustration ceases and art begins. This growing contrast between the seductive painterly aesthetic and the subject matter only adds to the potential impact of these formidable canvases.
Maguires most recent solo exhibitions include The Void, Derry (20152016); and Fergus McCaffrey, New York (2015). Group exhibitions and biennales include the Irish Museum of Modern Art; WIELS, Brussels; VISUAL, Carlow; Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane; National Gallery of Contemporary Art, Korea; Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, Japan; Dublin Contemporary (2011); the Beijing Biennale (2008, 2015) and the 24th Sāo Paolo Bienal (1998).
Maguires work is held in numerous public and private collections including the Museum of Fine Art Houston, USA; Museu de Arte do Rio, Brazil; Irish Museum of Modern Art; Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane; Trinity College Dublin; Alvar Aalto Museum, Finland; Gemeentemuseum, Den Haag, Netherlands; Wolverhampton Art Gallery, UK and Crawford Art Gallery, Cork.