Showing posts with label National Gallery of Ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Gallery of Ireland. Show all posts

30/01/2015

Disillusioned Trip to a Diminished National Gallery of Ireland



On Tuesday 30th December 2014, Carol and I went into the National Gallery of Ireland. I had avoided the National Gallery for a few years because I could not stand to see the museum I grew up with - reduced to a few rooms of selected highlights. However, I was interested in seeing the Hennessy Portrait Prize ‘14 and its twelve shortlisted artists - though I was shocked to see they had converted the old café into a cramped space to show the portraits. Portrait painting had suddenly become quite fashionable again with shows like Sky Arts Portrait Artist of The Year which Carol and I had greatly enjoyed - if only because we always liked to see artists working and amongst the shortlisted artists at the Hennessy Portrait Prize ’14 was Comhghall Casey who had twice appeared in the early heats of Portrait Artist of The Year. Still, in the age of modern media, I tended to find portrait painting as anachronistic as calligraphy, pottery or basket weaving – of course it could still be done but why bother? For me portrait painting only had continuing value if the artist could present a vision different to the one mass media already supplied - which is why I tended to think most conventional naturalist or realist painting pointless.                                                                        
Overall, I found the twelve works shortlisted for the Hennessy Portrait Prize ’14 mediocre - although with flickers of promise here and there - and most represented a particularly conservative, bourgeois and middle brow notion of the portrait that seemed to bypass the most troubling insights about modern alienation and mediation of Expressionism, Cubism, Pop or Post-Modernism.                                             
I thought Comhghall Casey’s self-portrait the kind of third rate kitsch realism of someone who acted as though the last two hundred years of painting hadn’t happened. Casey’s self-portrait was a deluded, smug, self-satisfied, self-portrait by someone who could draw and paint in a conventional and generic manner but knew nothing about art history and thought they were an Old Master living amongst us.        
Gavan McCullough’s arrogant looking self-portrait - a kind of paint by numbers version of Lucian Freud that displayed the dubious ability to make luscious oil paint look like latex - showed similar delusions but also a contempt for either himself or the viewer depending upon whether he had painted it looking in a mirror or camera lens.                                                                                                                               
Una Sealy’s portrait of her son was an even more blatant sugary pastiche of Lucian Freud and with none of his intensity, angst or relentless scrutiny. The backstory of Helen O'Sullivan-Tyrrell’s blurry portrait of her daughter sick in hospital was moving and humane, but undermined by its generic Gerhard Richter/Luc Tuyman’s blurred and muted painterly grammar which frankly tens of thousands of art students have mimicked worldwide for the past twenty years to no great effect. The only reason I could fathom for the popularity of this style was its contemporary stylish look - that allowed painters to shamelessly use photographs - and its comparative ease of production.                                                   
Geraldine O'Neill’s huge canvas Is feidir le cat Schrödinger an dá thrá a fhreastal - depicting a girl holding a plastic bag with a goldfish which was quite well painted into a feeble copy of an old master painting probably of Flemish origin upon which she then drew childlike drawings - was an awful pretentious mess just like its title. O'Neill’s desperate attempt to look profound fell as flat as her attempt to paint like an old master which literally came apart at the edges of her wonky and fitful drawing and painting. All in all it reminded me of some of the most generic Post-Modern pastiches of the Old Masters from the early 1980s. Worse still was the hectoring symbolism and attempt to seem profoundly intellectual. For me this cat was clearly dead. But I noticed that this confused pastiche and grand attempt to be what people popularly thought was the work of a real painter had pulled the slack jawed crowd around it.                                               
The winner of the exhibition had been Nick Miller’s Neo-Expressionist portrait of fellow painter Barry Cooke who had sadly died this year, however despite being in a style I admired I thought it crabbed, crude and even adolescent - despite Miller being middle aged.                                                                      
Despite loathing video art, I found Saoirse Wall’s work Gesture 2 - in which she lay in a bath with white tiles beside her and in a white dress as she looked out at the viewer challengingly – actually quite intense and unsettling and it remained in my memory. It was reminiscent of Frida Kahlo’s vulnerable paintings of herself in a bath or Tracey Emin’s photographs of herself in a bath looking exhausted by debauchery and fame. Wall’s Gesture 2 also had more impact when seen in the gallery where her gaze could unsettled the viewer unused to portraits looking back challengingly at the viewer.                 
                          
Hugh O'Conor’s sepia photograph of Beckah, a young black woman working in Dublin airport was the most beautiful and moving work in the show and a reminder that one can find moments of beauty in the most mundane places.                        
                                                                                                                                
But the most interesting work for me was Cian McLoughlin’s Tronie a menacing yellow smear of a head that from a distance appeared almost in profile yet close up appear frontally. This was the only painting in the show that had any spark of original and modern feeling for me.                                                        

Then we went around Lines of Vision a section of highlights from the museum’s permanent collection selected and written about by famous Irish authors. Though I was pleased to see again some of my favourite works, I found the experience of the overall exhibition unbearable. The white walls and blaring lights suited the high keyed modernist’s works but made viewing the darker Old Master paintings difficult. The room was thronged with people talking loudly, answering their mobile phones and the audio from a video piece of the various writers discussing the work with added music and being shown at the end of the exhibition space could be heard throughout the gallery. The only bright spot was the sight of a few beautiful arty girls with glasses and notebooks studiously looking at the art – but as a monogamous middle aged man I could now only imagine them as characters in someone else’s love story. Then there was the plague of text on the walls and throngs of people reading them – which meant that it was impossible to concentrate on the work. I remembered coming to the National Gallery as a twelve-year-old bunking-off from school, being almost alone save for the guards in the vast rooms - and becoming totally lost in particular brushstrokes and passages of drawing - but that kind of meditative loss of self was impossible these days of mass tourism and the mass cult of art as entertainment.                                                                          
I had become a painter to avoid having conversations with other people - though in later life I did enjoying talking about art with my girlfriends - my preferred conversations were with paintings. I had become a painter to avoid the written word but now museums were consumed with a diarrhea of text turning galleries of paintings into reading rooms and temples into freak shows. And art now had to be mediated by writers giving personal anecdotes about their fondness for such and such a work in the museum and how it influenced them – yet another example of the dominance of literature in Ireland. Even my own writing was a subconscious attempt to explain my work to a society that would not dream in paint. Perhaps such text helped the uninitiated - but personally I thought it was better to read about art at home and make the most of the time in galleries actually looking at the art. Worse still was the jumble sale assembly of paintings heedless of chronology, school or style, which hung masterpieces of world class stature with provincial daubs by Irish mediocrities turning everything into rubbish. It was like going to an insane house party where people were playing classical music, jazz and rock and roll in the same room – creating nothing but a berserk cacophony. I have frankly seen countless student exhibitions better curated than this costly vanity exercise. I thought an exhibition that included masterpieces by the likes of Rembrandt, Vermeer, Velázquez, Monet and Bonnard could be nothing but awe inspiring - however if this show proved anything it was what philistine curators could do to the art they were entrusted with. Moreover, by removing the paintings from their historical schools and matching them with works created centuries later and of no real similarity they robbed all the work of their historical meaning. For example I loved the work of Jack B. Yeats and regarded him as the greatest Irish painter ever, and valued the radical expressive power of his work - but when his late gestural oil paintings were hung beside the Old Masters - he looked like a demented lunatic. I had noticed this cataclysmic rupture between modern painting (let’s say from Cézanne and the advent of mass photography onwards) and Old Master painting (let’s say from Giotto to Manet) particularly in exhibitions that disastrously pared Picasso with Rembrandt, Velázquez and Goya. I was sure that Picasso was the genius of the twentieth century - but his art was a slap in the face of the Old Masters and comparing his late cartoony doodles in paint after the old masters - was like comparing a savage issuing a torrent of profanities with gentlemen reciting poetry. Yet if Post-Modernism had proved anything it was that the past could now be used and abused in whatever way present philistine curators wanted - after all the dead cannot speak in their own defense and the living are always secretly flattered by the ludicrous comparison.                  
Still, I was delighted to see again Jusepe de Ribera’s Saint Onuphrius one of the most touching and humane portraits of an old man I have ever seen. Ribera’s handling of the old saints wrinkled and worn skin was heartbreakingly sympathetic. I loved the way Ribera built up the hands of the Saint with dark, cool brushstrokes and then modeled the highlights with warm, light accents than came alive as weathered and wrinkled skin. In fact, Ribera was one of my favourite artists and one I thought sadly overshadowed by his peers like Caravaggio. Yes, Ribera lacked Caravaggio’s history changing style but arguably he brought more emotion out of his subjects, was more humane and handled paint in a more interesting way.                                   
Amongst the cacophony of verbal, literary and visual bombardment, I managed to glimpse again the astonishing naturalistic verisimilitude of Caravaggio’s The Taking of Christ and admired again his revolutionary use of chiaroscuro and composition - though again I thought his brushwork and handling of paint was relatively uninteresting from a modernist perspective.    
                                                                    
Looking again, at Caravaggio’s paintings in books in the weeks following our trip to the National Gallery of Ireland, I was reminded of my contradictory nature. I was usually disgusted by the sentimental kitsch of film, novels, music and art that flooded the world with positive uplifting notions about humanity and demanded that art reflect the tragedy of existence. However, when I did find an art like Caravaggio’s - all I wanted to do was return to the safe embrace of sentimentality. There was only so much pain in art one could bare. I wondered again, just what was it about Caravaggio that put me off his work? Caravaggio was many things I admired, he was a rebel, revolutionary and dark brooding genius and briefly as a selectively mute and troubled shut-in teenager I had hero worshiped him - but I quickly came to infinitely prefer Rembrandt - who had humanized his use of chiaroscuro and set paint free to express the inexpressible. What I did not admire about Caravaggio was his murderous pride and sinister narcissism even if I could partially empathise with both. While Caravaggio’s paintings were ruthlessly brilliant and possessed a darkness of damnation that had appealed to me as a teenager – as a more mellow middle aged man I found his vision almost sociopathic and his paintings too arrogant, fatalistic, lacking in humane virtues and obsessed with a largely homoerotic vision I did not share. While there had been many artists in history I had daydreamed about befriending - if I had seen Caravaggio approaching me in the street I would have braced myself for a fight. 

                                                                                                    
More importantly, as an expressive painter, I found Caravaggio’s highly finished painting style was so enclosed that it allowed me very little room to understand him on a personal level. If brushwork is the personal handwriting of an artist - which can provide an insight into their soul - Caravaggio built an impenetrable wall of illusion between himself and the world. His paintings were too dependent on his naturalistic talent and not enough on intellectual or sensual virtues. So I lamented his early death at the age of thirty-eight and thus consequent lack of a late mature style that could have revealed more of his character. It was almost as if after finding his rough trade models and staging them in his dramatically lit compositions in his cellar and perhaps using some kind of optical aid like a mirror to fix the drawing – painting them was just an (admittedly brilliant) afterthought.                                                                                                

Perversely I felt that the hyper-naturalism of Caravaggio ran counter to any real faith in God’s intervention. Everyone in Caravaggio’s paintings appeared doomed to act out religious rites for a God who either did not exist or would never intervene. Equally perversely the hyper-naturalism of Caravaggio - worked against imaginative transcendence. Looking at his work I felt like I was looking at an admittedly brilliant theatrical recreation – but theater none the less. Thus I saw him as the first post-religious painter and perhaps the first modern painter in his tragic articulation of man’s dramatic abandonment. Caravaggio revealed us to be doomed actors on a stage not of our making and with no escape. Our actions seemed real to us - but they were already scripted by fate or forces beyond our control. It was this hopelessness realism of Caravaggio – his illumination of the stage set of our existence that unsettled me the most. That is why even though I no longer could enter his world as I did as a mute teenager I could still acknowledge his unsettling genius.                                                                                                                        
Yet, to me, Caravaggio’s paintings were a fait accompli and viewers were left to either worship them or not give a dam - and as a middle aged man - I was mostly one of the latter. I had no doubt that if Caravaggio was alive in the age of cinema he would have been a masterful and enigmatic cinematographer or director - but like with Caravaggio the Baroque painter I had problems with the aggressively theatrical, declamatory and rabble rousing nature of a lot of cinema.                                                                          

Back in the National Gallery of Ireland, a tear nearly came to my eye when I saw the newly repaired Monet Argenteuil Basin with a Single Sailboat that had been punched by a malcontent who thankfully got sentenced to six years in prison – it was a long prison sentence but he had a long history of burglary and vandalism. If you looked closely you could still see where the painting had been torn as conservators now rightly ensured all their repairs could be seen and undone if necessary. The Monet was one of Carol’s favourite and she too nearly wept, “It’s such a beautiful and harmless painting! Why would anyone want to damage it?” Frankly, I had no clue, but it revealed to me again how many malignant forces of aggressive destruction - were arrayed against every act of creative freedom. One odd surprise was a Patrick Graham crucifixion study print After Giovanni di Paolo, from 1998 - which was little more than a sophisticated crucified stick figure - that reminded me of a very weak Paul Klee doodle. Normally I loved and highly rated Graham’s work, but I could not decide if After Giovanni di Paolo was glib or profound and finally settled on glib, superficial and scarcely worth the bother of a print run.                                                                 
Amongst the curatorial rubble, Vermeer’s Woman Writing a Letter, with her Maid glowed jewel like and almost made me weep. Though Vermeer’s measured and highly finished painting was the total opposite of the kind of painterly painting I admired - I found every inch of his painting and every brushstroke captivating in the most unexpected ways. I had been painting for over thirty-four years, so I was usually harshest on other painters - if only because most of the time I could see how they achieved what they did in their paintings - yet when looking at passages of painting by Vermeer I was still baffled by how he did it. While I was convinced that Vermeer had used a camera obscura to aid his paintings, I did not think that fully explained his uncanny distillation of reality, after all, over a hundred and fifty years of mass photography had passed and nobody had even remotely approached Vermeer’s genius for verisimilitude and magical realism - and more pertinently the intense need for such work had been eviscerated by the immediacy of mechanical reproduction. If Vermeer had used a camera obscura it would have only given him a basic basis for a drawing - he still had to have a masterful understanding of oil painting, perfect tonal pitch and a refined ability to place the right brushstrokes just so. Besides, Vermeer’s paintings were much more than a dutiful record of visual reality, since he spent half a year or more on each painting - they were as much about memory - in the kind of heightened way that the image of a beloved friend, lover or moment is longingly recalled in our mind. No wonder then that Proust the famed author of À la recherche du temps perdu (translated in my old copy as Remembrance of Things Past though now more literally translated as In Search of Lost Time) was one of the greatest admirers of Vermeer. As important as his use of the camera obscura must have been the influence of the superbly talented Carel Fabritius who painted the sublime Goldfinch and was Delft’s greatest painter until Vermeer – and who would surely be better known had he not been killed by an explosion in a nearby gunpowder magazine - which also destroyed most of his life’s work. Compared with virtually everyone in the exhibition who haphazardly threw down cliché brushstrokes - Vermeer’s brushstrokes spoke constantly of the most captivating delight in close, patient observation and reconsideration - such that the only comparison in modern terms could be with Cézanne - although his interior compositions also found echoes in the work of Edward Hopper. Moreover as an artist with perfect taste, Vermeer’s deep symbolism - that spoke of a world beyond the enclosed domestic spaces he inhabited - did not irritate like most attention seeking symbolism does - but rather enchanted and created a sense of wonder.                                                                                                                                          
Anyway, I could not bear to stay any longer in the National Gallery and we left after just an hour. I only hoped that when the National Gallery refurbishment was finished in 2016 that - the museum I loved would be returned to its former glory. Exasperated I ranted to Carol that the only gallery in Dublin that was maintaining standards was the Dublin City Museum The Hugh Lane and doubtless on less funds.        

Thankfully my day was improved no end when I returned home and found that The State of The Art by Arthur C. Danto from 1987 - had finally arrived in the post almost eight weeks after I had bought it online. I wanted State-of-The-Art because it had a dismissive review of Julian Schnabel and mentioned Neo-Expressionism disparagingly and I wanted to read them for my own essay on Schnabel. Both the review on Schnabel and Danto’s remarks on Neo-Expressionism were something of a disappointment - since Danto’s criticisms were ones other writers had phrased with more wit and originality. However, I found I greatly enjoyed Danto’s other critical essays even if I found his constant reference to the iconoclastic revolution of Warhol’s Brillo Boxes - which Danto seemed to think marked the end of art history – tiresomely hyperbolic. Personally, I just did not believe art progressed toward anything and thus it could never come to an end – it just merely repeated itself eternally – that was for me its joy and pitfall.

14/03/2014

The Goldfinch by Carel Fabritius

In the last week of March 2009, I went to see The Goldfinch, 1654 by Carel Fabritius’ (1622-54) in the National Gallery. It was on loan from the Royal Cabinet of Paintings, Mauritshuis, The Hague. It was the centrepiece of a tiny show Vermeer, Fabritus & De Hooch: Three Masterpieces from Delft. The National Gallery of Ireland had painted the walls a beautiful shade of sky blue, which set off this gem perfectly with its companions; Woman Writing a Letter with Her Maid by Johannes Vermeer which our National Gallery owned and The Courtyard of a House in Delft by Pieter de Hooch also on loan. I knew the Vermeer well as a stunning work of genius, so I did not look again at it. I looked at the de Hooch and was impressed by the magical light of his scene of a courtyard. However, I still thought of him as a poor man’s Vermeer. No, I had only come for one reason – to see this little bird.                                                                                                                             

I had first discovered The Goldfinch, in my father’s Heron History of Art books when I was a little boy and I instantly feel in love with it. However, given its location in The Hague I doubted I would ever get to see it in person. The reproduction of the painting in my old book was very crude, dark, warm and yellowed with age - but magical all the same. So to see The Goldfinch in the flesh; the purity of the bone-whites and warm and cool creams of the wall, the subtly modulated dusty blues of the bird box, and the symphony of Naples yellow, burnt sienna and a myriad of flecked greys and ochre’s that made up the bird’s plumage - was intoxicating.                                                                                 
            
It is estimated that during the seventy-five years of the Dutch Golden Age, Dutch painters made around five million oil paintings. That makes The Goldfinch, one of the most precious moments of inspired genius in Dutch art - especially since most of Fabritius’s other works had been destroyed in a catastrophic explosion in Delft.                                                                                                              

Little was known of Fabritius other than he was a star pupil of Rembrandt in Amsterdam and an early teacher of Vermeer in Delft – whose technique he clearly influenced. The history of art was full of hard luck stories, like when Camille Pissarro’s studio was ransacked by Prussian soldiers and many of his paintings were damaged or destroyed. But, Fabritius was even more unlucky. He was killed with all his family in a fluke explosion at a gunpowder factory near his studio that also destroyed much of Delft. He was only thirty-two when he died. The fire also destroyed virtually all his paintings so that there were only about twelve paintings left in the world by this precocious and unfulfilled master.          
                           
The Goldfinch was a small and deceptively simple picture, just a solitary Goldfinch, perched and tethered by a slender chain, on a rail in front of its feeding box. These little birds were common pets in the Dutch Golden Age, where they were nicknamed puttertjes or little water drawers due to their agility at taking in water. Some have seen the Goldfinch as symbolic of Christ on the Cross.         It was 355 years old, yet it was in immaculate condition, a validation of Fabritius’ technique and the care taken over its preservation by the Dutch who considered it one of the most beautiful paintings of its Golden Age. Ironically, this masterful painting may never have been intended as framed painting, but rather (given the thickness of the wooden panel) it might have been meant as a door to another encased painting.                              
                      
It was a poem in paint, in which Fabritius had gone beyond mere trompe-l’oeil –and entered into the soul of this little Goldfinch. The bird is captured almost in mid movement in a blur of brushstrokes. I looked at it repeatedly thinking that at any moment it might to come to life, sing or try to fly away. The brushwork was broad and direct but also very subtle and measured. The ghostly shading of the white wall behind the bird alone was beyond belief. I was astounded by Fabritius ability to shift even the tiniest portions of the painting from super-fine detail to enigmatic suggestion - in the space of a hairs breath. It was at once highly objective in its technique and humane in its vision, fresh in its paint handling and reasoned in its composition – based on an off-set x pattern. And it was the compositional purity and strength of The Goldfinch which drew me back to look and look again – even at home with the excellent postcard I bought of it. It was as close to a perfect piece of painting - as I had ever seen.

13/03/2014

Jack B. Yeats: The Courage To Feel



After the weekend, I went with Carol to The National Gallery so we could see the new exhibition given over to Jake B Yeats. It was the fiftieth anniversary of the death of this beloved Irish painter and this show was just one of a number dedicated to him this year. Jack B Yeats was the son of John Butler Yeats a great Irish portrait painter and draughtsman and brother of William Butler Yeats - Ireland’s greatest poet. But nearly the whole Yeats family were talented painters, draughtsmen, embroiders, musician, poets and playwrights – a strong case for genetics! The Yeats family was central to Irish social history from the late nineteenth century to the middle of the twentieth century. You could not understand Ireland if you had not come to terms with this wonderfully creative Irish family's contribution to painting, drawing, poetry, politics, mysticism, The Irish Revival, Irish Nationalism, The Easter Rising, The Irish Republic and the gossip columns of Ireland's newspapers. Ironically this quintessential Irish family were not Catholics at all – they were Protestant Anglo-Irish – what were called ‘West-Brits’ in Irish slang. The unrequited love of William Butler Yeats and Maud Gonne was such a romantic epic in Ireland, that I can remember my mother warning me: “Don’t end up like Yeats! He threw his life away waiting for Maud Gonne to love him!” While W.B. Yeats the poet had a worldwide reputation his painter brother Jack was sadly known only in Britain.                        

As the years passed, I grew fonder and fonder of Yeats’ paintings. I had always liked them since I was a teenager – but I was never really sure whether my love for his work was critically naïve or misjudged. His later canvases were some of the hardest works for the conventional art lover to appreciate. But he only came to his last reckless style after a lifetime of drawing from life or drawing from memory. At times the late canvases could be quite awful – a mess. Yeats painted about 2,000 oil paintings so there was bound to be some dross. But at his best in his late works he set line and colour free to play across the canvas – and if you looked close – you could see that the drawing was bold and assured. The magic of these works was the way we the viewers were encouraged to read the forms and move with them. But then you need not have taken my word for it - reputable foreign painters like Oskar Kokoschka (a friend of Jack B Yeats) and Lucian Freud and the Irish playwright Samuel Beckett were fans of his work.
             

Over time, I had grown stronger in the conviction that Yeats was the greatest Irish painter – one who captured the spirit of the Irish people better than many other artists some of whom were technically more skilled painters. No he was not a world rate painter like Picasso, Beckman, or even Pollock but he was a worthy brother to artists like Georges Rouault, James Ensor, and Oscar Kokoschka. Like them, his paintings took a hard look at some of the harsher and more unjust aspects of life. Like them, his work was full of daring colours, lightening brushstrokes, impastoed paint and a judicious use of black. Like them, his work was animated and situated in moments of great spectacle - and like them, he lived his life withdrawn from the world.
            

Masquerade & Spectacle: The Circus and The Travelling Fair in The Work of Jake B Yeats, was a beautifully chosen collection of 22 paintings and watercolours from 1902-1952 about the marginalized and exotic lives of the clowns, bareback-riders and acrobats in the travelling Circus. The exhibition space was dimly lit and each painting was spot lit – giving the paintings an eerie effervescent quality. The lighting brought out his intense colours and the rich texture of his paintings. Despite the fact that most of the works were behind glass – they were all perfectly visible – such a change from awful displays I had seen in the past.
             

The theme of the Circus at the turn of the twentieth century was a favourite of many socially conscious painters like Edgar Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, George Rouault and of course Pablo Picasso. The circus people lived on the margins of society, like Gypsies but they also drew in the working and middle classes with their exotic entertainment and proletarian theatre. Many of these artists identified with the circus people because they too were poor and not in respectable employment – living for art, truth and beauty – on the margins of bourgeois, industrialised society. The clown, the bareback rider and the acrobat also provided artists with pictures full of drama and theatre – allowing them to speak to the ‘stage of life’ and the tragedy of its actors. So in some respects their paintings of clowns were in fact self-portraits in disguise.
             

Many of these paintings were from private collections and so unfamiliar even to Irish art lovers. The exhibition covered Yeats slow progression from tight linear black and white illustrations, to moody pencil drawings tinted with watercolour, into angular illustrative oil paintings, then into a wonderfully loose yet still well-drawn painterly canvases and finally into his late almost abstract–expressionist style – the paint taken straight from the tube and scrubbed in dry-brush, or glossy glazes or thick impasto sculpted and drawn with the pallet knife. Although Yeats was never technically on a par with even Irish Belle Epoch painters like William Orpen or John Lavery – he more than made up for it with canny insights into human beings, expressive courage and a little thing called soul – something sadly lacking in this Post-Modern world.
             

All his life Yeats was to benefit from his journalistic background - which sharpened his eyes to the life around him. His early work was illustrational, even occasionally comic like. He was thirty-five before he started to paint in oils. He lived a solitary life in Dublin with his wife – but he loved to sketch in the streets. His little sketchbooks, watercolours and oil paintings are full of moments of daily Irish life – caught in all their movement, rituals, and character. He loved covering sports events, figures in the city, the circus and the men of the west of Ireland.                                                                  


Repeatedly the Irish man in solitude emerges. The man about to write a letter, or alone in the streets bustling with others, sitting alone in a tram while three women gossip utterly oblivious of his existence, or as a melancholy clown, or a dwarf alone and behind the scenes. But at other times he depicted virile Irish men as fishermen, swimmers, boxers, jockeys, bareback riders or heroes of Irish myth. Women in Yeats paintings could be elegant, haughty, dainty, kindly or proud. But he never degraded them - there was hardly a nude in his whole oeuvre. He showed women as social beings - like exotic beauties in cold Dublin city streets full of crowds and incident. Women in Yeats paintings are feminine, self-assured and a vital part of Irish society.  But perhaps his greatest love was for horses. He drew them all his life and his depictions have a freshness, vigour and anatomical accuracy lacking in so many stilted equestrian pictures.
             

This was quite simply the best exhibition I had seen since the Lucian Freud and it was a delight to the senses. I would have happily owned half of these 22 paintings.
             

One of my favourite rooms in the National Gallery in those days was at the very end of the English school. Hung against a dark green wall were lovely, modest, paintings by John Singer Sargent, Alfred Munnings and Augustus John.
            

Woodrow Wilson (1917) by Sargent was a truly emptied out and pointless painting even for a Sargent fanatic like myself. It struck me as soulless, effortless and aloof - nothing better than boardroom art.
             

For sheer visual wattage and painterly fireworks Alfred Munning’s Evening At The Ford (1950) was the winner in this room. His painting of men on horses wading a ford in the dying light of summertime set my pulses racing. Munnings pallet of dark mauve's and browns for the background the figures of the men and horses – contrasted with the lime, lemon and Sapphire blue of the water made me want to paint.
             

I was less convinced by The Red Prince Mare (1921) – perhaps because the painting as a whole did not seem to fit together. This was because Munnings had sketched the horse with rider in scarlet jacket, on top in the paddock. He had painted the sky outdoors. However, he completed the painting in his studio. This meant the sketchy Impressionistic treatment of the sky and background – jostled with almost photographic treatment of the horse and foreground area.
             

Augustus John’s Carlotta c1901 was not wholly believable. The drawing seemed somewhat indecisive and odd-looking. But I liked the nod to Rembrandt and the velvety brushstrokes that harked back to Frans Hals.  Dr Kuno Meyer (1911) was a much later painting and a far more modern portrait of a powerful and impressive figure of a man. Here John had used a quite daring pallet of bold blues, modulated whites and bottle greens. I loved the bold and summery brushstrokes and the power of the design. However, it was John’s portrait of Sean O’Casey (1926) – scraped down and repainted over and over – that was my favourite. I loved the fresh, bold and intelligent - painterly attack. The readjustments were even more telling - in their searched for correctness.