Showing posts with label Brian Maguire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brian Maguire. Show all posts

02/10/22

Brian Maguire @ Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago - North and South of the Border

Brian Maguire 
North and South of the Border
Rhona Hoffman Gallery, Chicago
September 16 – October 22, 2022

Rhona Hoffman Gallery presents North and South of the Border, an exhibition of new and recent paintings by Irish painter and social activist BRIAN MAGUIRE. The exhibition is comprised of a selection of portraits and landscapes from three different bodies of work: Missing and Murdered Indigenous People (M&MIP), Montana; The Remains, Arizona; and The Aleppo Paintings, Syria. Spanning depictions of scenes and individuals from Montana, Mexico, Central America, Arizona, and Aleppo, Syria, Brian Maguire’s paintings represent the voices of marginalized groups whose stories are not widely disseminated. 

The M&MIP painted portraits, the most recent body of work in the exhibition, was created while Maguire participated in a residency at the Missoula Art Museum in Montana. Missoula is a city near both the Flathead Reservation and the Blackfeet Reservation and proved an apt location for the project. Throughout parts of the United States and Canada, an epidemic is quietly transpiring wherein thousands of Indigenous peoples have disappeared or have been murdered. Brian Maguire’s memorial portraits are rendered from photographs that the family members select, the finished painting being an intimate rendition capturing the likeness and spirit of the subject. There are ultimately two paintings created, one for public exhibitions and one for the family. 

Regarding his The Remains (Arizona) paintings - the second body of work reflected in this exhibition - Brian Maguire says: “...it is the death I record or memorialize in this project. No family would like to retain this image of a loved one, except as needed by a process of seeking justice. My work since 1997 has become increasingly focused on lives lost, often with a political perspective on the event of the loss.” These gestural paintings of skulls in the dirt or a splayed face-down body, as is the case in Arizona 6, reference the migrant crisis at the US/Mexico border, specifically the annual fatalities of Central Americans in the deserts around Tucson, Arizona. The Remains (Arizona) paintings confront issues of migration, displacement, and the dangers forcing those to risk their lives to relocate. 

Aleppo 5 is a commanding painting from Brian Maguire’s The Aleppo Paintings series. Depicting a crumbling and dilapidated building in Aleppo, Brian Maguire first photographically documented the structure during a 2017 visit to Syria before replicating it in his studio. His interest in covering migrant crises through his art transcends specific locations to address the global and widespread issue of forced migration, made more pervasive now due to war, social upheaval, and climate change. The ongoing Syrian Civil War, which officially started in 2011, prompted millions of Syrians to seek refuge in Europe and other surrounding areas, resulting in a major humanitarian emergency. The desolate setting of Aleppo 5 with an isolated passing figure is representative of the trauma inflicted on Syrians and their culture - architecture, infrastructure, art, and history.

Brian Maguire’s investment in social activism stems from his involvement in the civil rights movement of Northern Ireland in the 1970s. He remains committed to making artwork that responds to humanitarian catastrophes, hoping to promote dialogue and support for those afflicted.

BRIAN MAGUIRE (b. 1951 Dublin, Ireland) lives and works in Dublin and Paris. Solo exhibitions have been mounted at institutions and venues such as The Missoula Art Museum (Montana); The Crawford Art Gallery (Cork, Ireland); The United Nations Headquarters (New York); The Rubin Center for the Visual Arts at Texas University (El Paso, TX); Museo de Arte de Ciudad Juárez (Mexico); and The Irish Museum of Modern Art (Dublin, Ireland). His artwork is in the collections of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas; Museo de Arte do Rio, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland; Dublin City The Hugh Lane, Dublin; Arts Council Collection, Dublin; Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, Ireland; Dun Laoghaire Rathdown County Council, Dublin; National Portrait Collection, Limerick Office of Public Works, Kilkenny Art Gallery Collection, Kilkenny, Ireland; Trim, Ireland; Openbaar Psychiatrisch Zorgcentrum, Geel, Belgium; Trinity College, Dublin; University College, Cork and Dublin; Wicklow County Council, Ireland; Tia Collection, Santa Fe, New Mexico; Gemeentemuseum, The Hague-Netherlands; Jyvaskyla Art Museum, Finland; Liverpool University, UK; and Wolverhampton Art Gallery, UK.

RHONA HOFFMAN GALLERY
1711 West Chicago Avenue, Chicago, IL 60622
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18/09/21

Brian Maguire @ Crawford Art Gallery, Cork - Remains

Brian Maguire: Remains
Crawford Art Gallery, Cork
17 September 2021 - 9 January 2022

Brian Maguire
BRIAN MAGUIRE
Arizona 2, 2020
Acrylic on linen, 150 x 200 cm
Photo courtesy of Kerlin Gallery, Dublin
© Brian Maguire

Crawford Art Gallery presents Remains, a series of large scale artworks by BRIAN MAGUIRE. The exhibition depicts the lives lost crossing the border to the US.

Artist Brian Maguire, known for his expressionist paintings addressing issues of social injustice, continues his creative enquiry into the Mexican/American border. In 2019, Brian Maguire visited Dr Greg Hess, Chief Medical Examiner for Pima County, Tucson, Arizona. Dr Hess gave the artist access to some thousand visual records of migrant lives lost in the crossing from South and Central America and Mexico, into the United States. Having combed through these records, Brian Maguire began a new series of paintings, acknowledging the many unidentified victims who undertook this perilous journey to the United States.
Curator Anne Boddaert says ‘When Brian shared his work with us, here in the Crawford Art Gallery, we were upended, we looked and simply could not look away. His works compels the audience to linger on issues of migration and global unrest‘. Anne Boddaert went on to say “Despite the challenging subject matter, visitors will be drawn to Brian’s expressionist style beautifully executed in these expansive paintings. This exhibition will showcase the artist’s poised technique and how he utilises open and rough brushstrokes to represent the harsh landscape of South and Central America and Mexico’ .
In late 2020, the Crawford Art Gallery secured the painting Arizona 3 for the national collection. This acquisition opened up a conversation with Brian Maguire about a showing of this emerging body of work, some of his most nuanced and ambitious to date. 

Brian Maguire
Brian Maguire
Remains
Exhibition Catalogue
A catalogue with full colour illustrations and texts by Dr Greg Hess, Christian Viveros-Fauné and Edward Vulliamy accompanies the exhibition.
BRIAN MAGUIRE
Irish painter Brian Maguire studied at Dun Laoghaire School of Art and the National College of Art and Design. He has worked with marginalised groups in institutions in Ireland, Poland and the US. Maguire represented Ireland at the São Paolo Biennale in 1998. He was appointed Professor of the Fine Art Faculty of the National College of Art and Design in 2000 and is an elected member of Aosdána. Brian Maguire has shown extensively in Europe and the US, most recently at the Museo De Arte de Ciudad Juarez, Mexico and the Rubin Centre, Texas University at El Paso, Texas (September 2019), at the United Nations Headquarters, New York, (in 2020), the Rhona Hoffmann Gallery, Chicago, (January 2021), and Galerie Christophe Gaillard, Paris (March 2021).

CRAWFORD ART GALLERY
Emmet Place, Cork, Ireland

09/07/16

Brian Maguire @ Kerlin Gallery, Dublin

Brian Maguire
Over Our Heads the Hollow Seas Closed Up

Kerlin Gallery, Dublin
Through 20 August 2016

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).

Since the very beginning of his career in the 1970s, Brian Maguire has approached painting as an act of solidarity. He operates a truly engaged practice, compelled by the raw realities of humanity’s violence against itself, and the potential for justice. Maguire’s preoccupations draw him to the margins of the art world—alternative space, prisons, women’s shelters, and psychiatric institutions—making 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, which is taken from Primo Levi’s If This Be a Man, which in turn is quoting from Dante’s Inferno. In these paintings, Brian Maguire directly confronts issues of migration, displacement and human 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 Brian 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 Brian Maguire’s 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.

Brian Maguire’s most recent solo exhibitions include The Void, Derry (2015–2016) 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) and the 24th Sāo Paolo Bienal (1998).

Brian Maguire’s 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.

Kerlin Gallery
Anne's Lane, South Anne Street, Dublin D02 A028
www.kerlingallery.com