Cowhouse Studios Residency by Eithne Jordan

Richard Gorman, Tamsin Snow and Eithne Jordan – Awarded Age & Opportunity Visual Arts Residency at Cowhouse Studios

August 21, 2019

Age & Opportunity and Cowhouse Studios are delighted to announce the 5th year of the Age & Opportunity Visual Arts Residency initiative, which will will take place August 26th – September 6th.

The idea behind the residency is to create a quiet space over the course of two weeks for artists of different generations to consider their practices, and the changing contexts of those practices as time has moved on in their career.

This year the artists Richard Gorman, Tamsin Snow and Eithne Jordan have been selected as the Age & Opportunity Visual Arts Residency artists. There are no formal outcomes expected from the project other than an artistic engagement with the other artists. The residency will conclude with a public discussion at Wexford Arts Centre on Wednesday 4th September from 2pm – 4pm.

This Residency is an Age & Opportunity ARTS initiative, for more information on Age & Opportunity’s Arts Programme visits ageandopportunity.ie

Artist Biographies
Richard Gorman is celebrated as one of Ireland’s foremost abstract artists. Primarily a painter, he has also worked extensively in printmaking and, to a lesser extent, sculpture. Gorman’s spare compositions are sharply delineated with curvilinear forms using areas of flat, perfectly pitched colour. He is known for the exceptional elegance and economy of his work in all mediums, including several series of innovative hand-made paper pieces in which the pigment is soaked into the thick surface texture of the paper. Richard Gorman’s oil paintings on linen characteristically involve clearly defined interrelated blocks of colour, creating tensions between themselves and the edge of the canvas.

Eithne Jordan was born in Dublin where she studied at Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design & Technology. She was awarded a DAAD scholarship in 1984 to study at the Hochschule der Künste in West Berlin, where she subsequently lived for several years. Since 1990 she has worked between Languedoc in the south of France and Ireland. Her work focuses on the contemporary city, looking at places such as Paris, Rotterdam, Madrid, Vienna, and most recently Dublin. A member of Aosdana and the Royal Hibernian Academy, she is one of Ireland’s leading figurative painters. Recent solo shows include 2017: Tableau, Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane; When Walking, Butler Gallery Kilkenny; 2012:Street, RHA, Dublin.Further information on her work can be found at www.eithnejordan.ie

Tamsin Snow (who lives and works in Dublin) studied at the Royal College of Art, London (2012) and Goldsmiths College, London (2008). Snow’s works derive from her ongoing investigations into the legacies of modernist architecture. She constructs large-scale built environments, sculpture and CGI animations to raise questions about the political and ideological underpinnings of architecture and social spaces. Past exhibitions include: Spare Face, Block 336, London (2018), Cross Sections Project, Kunsthalle Exnergasse, WUK, Vienna (2018); Resort, Mermaid Arts Centre, Wicklow (2017); Multifaith, Dazed X Confused Emerging Artist Award, Royal Academy, London (2015); Lobby Part I & II, Oonagh Young Gallery, Dublin (2015); and Pavilion, Store, London (2014). Snow was the recipient of the KulturKontakt Residency Award, Vienna; Fire Station Sculpture Bursary Award (2018); Artlink Fort Dunree Artist Residency Award, Donegal; SPACE Residency Programme, Monaghan and HIAP/ TBG&S Residency Award, Helsinki (2017)



RGKS CRIBS#3 by Eithne Jordan

RGKSKSRG
presents
RGKS Cribs #3: Eithne Jordan

RGKS Cribs #3: Eithne Jordan (video still), commissioned and produced by RGKSKSRG, 2019. Videography by Louis Haugh.

RGKS Cribs #3: Eithne Jordan (video still), commissioned and produced by RGKSKSRG, 2019. Videography by Louis Haugh.

Online: 16 July - 16 October 2019
Live event: Sunday 6 October 2019
Event tickets available from 6 September 2019

www.rgksksrg.com

RGKSKSRG presents Eithne Jordan, as the third artist in the RGKS Cribs series, with a video clip here and a live event in Dublin city centre on Sunday 6 October 2019.

Eithne Jordan is an artist with a painting practice. She works from her studios, one in an eighteenth century Georgian tenement building on Henrietta Street in Dublin's North inner city, the other in an eighteenth century townhouse in the ancient village of Montpeyroux in the Languedoc. In those attic places she paints, capturing architectural stillness, cast shadows and slants of light. She works methodically from photographs punctuated with measurements and ambiguous dimensions to produce atmospheric, figureless evocations of the built environment. Both studios are accessed via aged and timeworn staircases, over one hundred staccato steps ushering the artist up or down, into or away from the sanctuary of her paints, pots, print-outs, turps, brushes, sketches, cloths, paintings and pure light filled lofts.

Together with the artist, RGKSKSRG warmly invite you to watch the video, book your tickets, and join us for a live event on Sunday 6 October 2019 in Dublin. Tickets go on sale on 6 September 2019. Due to limited capacity, early booking is advised.

As part of the project, RGKSKSRG have produced a limited edition artist print (pictured) with the artist. Available to purchase online here.

RGKS Cribs #3: Eithne Jordan (video still), commissioned and produced by RGKSKSRG, 2019. Videography by Louis Haugh.
Giclée archival pigment print
17 x 30cm, unframed
Edition of 10
€ 50 per print

Purchase now via our Eventbrite link above and collect from Dublin-based RGKSKSRG. Kate/Rachael will contact you directly to co-ordinate collection/delivery. Proceeds go to the artist and to supporting RGKS Cribs programming.


RGKS Cribs is a season-by-season plunge into artists’ studios. Each artist is commissioned to produce a video clip online, to be followed by a one-off event staged with an audience in their studio, home, or place of work. RGKS Cribs is a commissioning platform by RGKSKSRG that explores the significance of the artist studio. Artists featuring in 2019 are Christopher Mahon (January–April), Vivienne Dick (April–July), Eithne Jordan (July–October), and Bea McMahon (October–January).

Eithne Jordan was born in Dublin where she studied at Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design & Technology from 1972-76. She was awarded a DAAD scholarship in 1984 to study at the Hochschule der Künste in West Berlin, where she subsequently lived for several years. Since 1990 she has worked between Languedoc in the south of France and Ireland. Her work is in major public and private collections in Ireland, Europe and the US and she is a member of Aosdána and the Royal Hibernian Academy.

RGKSKSRG is the paired curatorial practice of Rachael Gilbourne and Kate Strain.

The third in the series of RGKS Cribs has been made possible with support from The Digital Hub, Dublin City Council, Dónall Curtin and other private patrons.

With further thanks to the artist Eithne Jordan, videographer Louis Haugh, composer Timothy Cullen, designer Alex Synge | The First 47, and web developer Ciarán Hickey, for making RGKS Cribs #3 happen.

For further information and print-ready images, please contact:
rgksksrg@rgksksrg.com

Legacies, VISUAL Carlow by Eithne Jordan

VISUAL Carlow

LegaciesA Painters Life:09 February - 19 MayAdam Bohanna, Eithne Jordan, Stephen Loughman, William McKeown (1968–2011), Isabel Nolan and Mairead O'hEochaGathering memories and artistic works by a number of artists who would have found inspiration in…

Legacies

A Painters Life:

09 February - 19 May

Adam Bohanna, Eithne Jordan, Stephen Loughman, William McKeown (1968–2011), Isabel Nolan and Mairead O'hEocha

Gathering memories and artistic works by a number of artists who would have found inspiration in Stephen McKenna’s, techniques, processes and friendship, Legacies celebrates the depths of this artist’s influence.

In admiration and friendship, this group show pays tribute to Stephen McKenna’s continued presence in the work of others.

Artists Talk

9th February, 3.30pm

Curator Emma-Lucy O’Brien in conversation with artists from Legacies exhibiton.

With thanks to the artists, Kerlin Gallery, Dublin, Mothers Tankstation, Dublin and Kevin Kavanagh Gallery, Dublin. The McKenna Estate.

OPENING HOURS

11am - 5:30pm Tuesday to Saturday

2pm - 5pm Sunday

Closed on Monday

ADMISSION FREE

In conversation: Eithne Jordan with Sherman Sam by Eithne Jordan

Wednesday 11 October / 5pm

Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane

Join us prior to the opening of Eithne Jordan’s exhibition Tableau when the artist, whose work exploring architectural interiors is a dialogue about the continuity between the past and the present, will be in conversation with writer and artist Sherman Sam.
Free, no booking required.

"Tableau", Dublin City Gallery The Hugh Lane by Eithne Jordan

12 October 2017 - 14 January 2018

Eithne Jordan, Dining Hall ll.jpg

Over the past three decades Eithne Jordan has worked from her roots in neo-expressionism and developed her practice into a considered and meditative representation of space and light. Whether it is the darkness of a February afternoon, the reflected light of a fresh snowfall, or the distinctive hue of Halogen Street lights, her paintings are charged with content that is either to come, or else is taking place just out of view. Her work in recent years focuses on the contemporary city, looking at places such as Paris, Rotterdam, Madrid, Vienna, and most recently Dublin.

In her new series of paintings depicting interiors, Jordan invites us to look closely at the multi layered histories woven through the spaces of institutions and public buildings in our cities. Many of these are museums, or historic buildings that often contain art as a backdrop to civic or commercial activities. In Jordan's exhibition at The Hugh Lane, Tableau, her works inhabiting the rooms of Charlemont House, once domestic, now public, become a Gesamtkunstwerk – a total work of art. These paintings, like a strange mirror, are observing us, and reflecting a repetition of lives lived. Jordan is working in the realm of the extraordinary, the humdrum extraordinary, bringing to the fore the details and perspectives of our reality, She creates an idea, not of contrast, but rather of dialogue, an indication of the continuity between the past and the present, between old and modern.

Eithne Jordan was born in Dublin where she studied at Dun Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design & Technology from 1972-76. She was awarded a DAAD scholarship in 1984 to study at the Hochschule der Künste in West Berlin, where she subsequently lived for several years. Since 1990 she has worked between Languedoc in the south of France and Ireland. Her work is in major public and private collections in Ireland, Europe and the US and she is a member of Aosdana and the Royal Hibernian Academy.

A catalogue on Eithne Jordan's work will be published in November 2017.

Butler Gallery / Eithne Jordan: When walking by Eithne Jordan

Street II.jpg

Originally posted on butlergallery.com

The Butler Gallery was delighted to present an exhibition of new gouaches and paintings by Eithne Jordan, one of Ireland’s leading painters.

This body of work was made during Jordan’s one-year residency at the Tony O’Malley Studio on Bridge Street in Callan, County Kilkenny. Armed with a camera and intrepid walking legs, Jordan captured and recorded what she encountered on her frequent walks about Callan and the surrounding countryside. Carefully studying the assembled images back in the studio, tough decisions were made as to which to dedicate to painting.

Jordan was particularly struck by the vernacular architecture, both the remarkable and the unremarkable, encountered throughout the countryside. This eclectic miscellany of both public and domestic buildings is imbued with character and atmosphere. Familiar bungalows are made singular by their owner’s use of faux Georgian pillars or decorative stone cladding. A melancholic cottage sits abandoned and boarded up, just like so many others throughout this country. Jordan deftly captures a pink-hued sky just before the sun sets; a water tower, a church ruin, leafless trees, each are silhouetted against the late evening light. The unmistakable architecture of a local convent looms tall and makes its presence felt within the landscape. An empty football pitch borders a ghost estate, awaiting the animation of games to come.

Tony O’Malley’s early works captured the essence of his beloved Kilkenny. Eithne Jordan has taken her own path through his familiar landscape, tenderly responding in her inimitable way, distinguished by her particular eye and life experience.

Anna O’Sullivan
Director