Heaven and earth

Paddy Graham is warily self-critical as an artist, a quality that, while not unusual, is by no means universal, writes Aidan Dunne


Heaven and earth
Writer

Artist

Back to this Issue

Category
Artists

Share

With a pattern of work and exhibition that has continued pretty consistently since the mid1970s, Paddy Graham has been something like the conscience of Irish painting in the eyes of many. This was particularly true in the United States in the 1980s where, championed by Jack Rutberg and acclaimed by Donald Kuspit and other commentators, he was regarded as being vitally representative of contemporary Irish painting, rejecting bland academic and conservative pieties and engaging critically with issues surrounding cultural inheritance and identity. If flattering, this estimation inevitably entailed a certain level of pressure, not to mention critical scrutiny

More from the Summer 2022 edition

The Reading Figure In Irish Art In The Long Nineteenth Century

The Reading Figure In Irish Art In The Long Nineteenth Century


Preview Article
100 Women of Limerick

100 Women of Limerick


Preview Article
Ireland’s earliest art

Ireland’s earliest art

Unravelling the sequence of carving on the stones has been challenging but has been helped by the fact that there are so many examples to study, writes Elizabeth Shee Twohig


Preview Article
Shopping cart0
There are no products in the cart!
Continue shopping
0