Receding planes

Dickon Hall considers the work of Northern Irish artist Arthur Armstrong on the centenary of his birth


Receding planes
Writer

Artist

Back to this Issue

Category
Artists
Arts Lives and Exhibitions

Share

There are arguably few significant figures in modern Irish art who remain as subtly elusive as Arthur Armstrong. In some ways, it is difficult to establish exactly why this is. Armstrong was a quiet but witty and comparatively sociable man, popular in art circles, with a number of close friends. He painted prolifically, once estimating that he completed ‘about three hundred pictures a year’, and exhibited regularly from his early twenties until his seventies. His work is in many public collections across Ireland and in the 1960s he was described in the Irish Times as ‘one of the half-dozen best living Irish painters’, yet it remains difficult to clearly identify his place within the canon of Irish art.

To read this article in full, subscribe or buy this edition of the Irish Arts Review

More from the Spring 2024 edition

Coders of the zeitgeist

Coders of the zeitgeist

What is urgent for artists working in Ireland? Sarah Kelleher explores the RDS Visual Art Awards at the Irish Museum of Modern Art


Preview Article
Backstage with O’Casey

Backstage with O’Casey

John P O’Sullivan surveys Mick O’Dea’s paintings of characters from the playwright Seán O’Casey’s plays


Preview Article
Bird’s-eye view

Bird’s-eye view

There is a confidence about Mollie Douthit’s practice, which is slow and considered, writes Margarita Cappock


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