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Bridget O'Rourke |
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Yellow on green ~ oil on canvas ~ 30 x 30 cm |
Bridget O'RourkeDepths ~ June 3rd -July 9ththA fully-illustrated catalogue has been published to coincide with the show (ISBN 978-0-9557742-6-3). Catalogue Introduction by Fiachra Gibbons, former Arts Correspondent with The Guardian These are the traces that memory leaves on canvas. Close your eyes and try to remember key moments in your life. Remember how we tried to guard those moments, hold onto that image or that face, and how we constantly had to remake them to stop them blurring away into the infinity of everything else we have ever seen? What we end up with is an image of what we felt rather than how it was. What we are remembering is feeling, whose colour and depth is in the end just as real as the actual images we saw when the photocells crossed our retinas. |
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Japan 3 of 4 ~ oil on canvas, triptych ~ each 20 x 20 cm |
“Visual memory is both fascinating and difficult. If you look at something for a long time, and then you close your eyes and look at a white wall you see an after-image that shimmers in front of you. Visual memories are like that. When a lived image becomes a memory it becomes a kind of half tone in our mind that can sometimes be better than the actual image itself because it is the essence of the memory. In some ways that is what I am after.” |
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Stripes green and orange ~ oil on wood, diptych ~ each 30 x 30 cm |
These paintings are the product of an infinite patience, and their meditative charge increases the longer you spend with them. Like Mark Rothko, Sean Scully or Gerhard Richter, whose effect on O’Rourke’s work is clear, she has been heavily influenced by religious art, in her case from her Irish Catholic childhood in America and her early fascination with Michelangelo. For her, however, it was the discovery of how religious art is used almost universally as a tool for meditation, from Buddhist and Hindu mandalas to Catholic and Byzantine madonnas, that opened a door into what was going on underneath the surface of the paint, in the realm of the unseen, where the real magic is happening. |
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Blue and yellow ~ oil on wood ~ 24 x 51 cm |
“It is the same thing with visual memories. It is the mental imprint they leave, that after-image that is the really interesting thing. The scientific research around this, particularly about perception and psychological projection is summed up by the French philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty who said, ‘More directly than any other dimension, depth forces us to reject the preconceived notion of the world and rediscover the primordial experience from which it springs: it is, so to speak, the most existential of all dimensions, [. . .].’1 Depth and depths are what link all of my work.” |
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Far and near pink ~ oil on wood ~ 30 x 60 cm |
Hers is a hard-won minimalism, one that comes through stripping down and paring back to the essentials, much like Samuel Beckett, one of her intellectual heroes. Like his work, her’s has a warm, lived reductiveness. It speaks. “A lot of minimalist art does not have a heart to it,” she feels. “For it to work and to have intensity it has to be the most minimum gesture on canvas that will still speak. That is when it is really beautiful and touching and powerful.” Her love of diptychs and triptychs comes out of marrying minimalism with the need to go deeper, to question. Most of the work you see in this show are conversations, puzzles really, each working off the other, interrogating, illuminating, darkening its neighbour, pointing up differences. O’Rourke wants their meditative nature to win out, transporting, transcending the viewer into another realm. Look long enough and you will see her figurative past coming out from the depths of the paint. Rain, cages, figures on the far horizon, families, genes, bar codes, hidden vistas, sudden unexpected landscapes and here and there the glimmer of coming light… or is it fading? We sometimes don’t know if we are at the beginning or the end of something, but like the best poetry they have the power to stop you dead and hold you in an instant in time. Each is a journey to take - they are in fact whatever we want to project onto them. In that way too, they are just like memories. Fiachra Gibbons, former Arts Correspondent for The Guardian, Paris, April 2010 |
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Skin orange and pink ~ oil on wood, diptych ~ each 30 x 30 cm |
Bridget is a Paris-based MFA graduate of the University of Pennsylvania. She has shown in the Royal Hibernian Academy Annual Exhibition in Dublin in 2007 and 2009, at Galleria Facsimile in Milan, at the Lanitis Foundation in Nicosia, Cyprus (as part of the In Transition Exhibition), and at KGB in Paris. |
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Red-brown on blue ~ oil on canvas ~ 30 x 30 cm |
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Green blue-green ~ oil on canvas, diptych ~ each 10 x 10 cm |
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Japan 4 of 4 ~ oil on canvas, triptych ~ each 20 x 20 cm |
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Untitled part 2 ~ oil on canvas ~ 30 x 60 cm |
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Untitled part 1 ~ oil on canvas ~ 30 x 60 cm |
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the molesworth gallery, 16 Molesworth Street, Dublin 2, Ireland |
