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Auction archive: Lot number 107

Patrick Collins HRHA (1911-1994

Estimate
€15,000 - €20,000
ca. US$17,796 - US$23,729
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 107

Patrick Collins HRHA (1911-1994

Estimate
€15,000 - €20,000
ca. US$17,796 - US$23,729
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Patrick Collins HRHA (1911-1994) Moonrise on the Lake Oil on canvas, 65 x 92cm (25½ x 36¼'') Signed In Patrick Collins A View on Painting, broadcast on RTÉ in 1985, Collins speaks of how The title is nearly always a clue to a picture and its the only effort the artist can make to give you some literary statement that helps you with a picture. Its called something so therefore you look for something. Its called A Valley at Sunset or The Lakes of Killarney, A Street Scene, Still Life. All these things will help you look for this. But again theres the contradiction. If you just look for what the title suggests, youre going to miss the subtlety of the picture which goes beyond that. Moonrise on the Lake conjures up a romantic, lyrical image but, as Collins himself, suggests it goes beyond a rising moon and lakescape. Look for the lake, look for the moon and they are there but as Collins himself observes the painting goes beyond that. It can be admired for what it is and for what it suggests. Asked, in 1973, about being called an abstract expressionist Collins replied its true in a way. When Im into a picture, Ill always forget the subject . . . . because its the whole flow that important. Moonrise on the Lake is both representational and abstract. What you see is what you get does not apply here. The more you engage with this work, the more rewarding it is. Peter Murray says The painting can mean different things to different people, a vagueness Collins encouraged; his deliberate use of indistinct forms, engulfed or surrounded by an almost tangible atmosphere, freed the art work from the specific and the everyday. This composition features a grey-blue lake at night and in the distance, white and pale yellow bands of light shine out against a darker background. But in Collinss work colour is never a single colour. His palette brilliantly combines different colours and in this instance soft brushstrokes create a quiet movement in the water. In the foreground the brighter, different shapes, the use of strong blacks and whites and the block of colour, with its yellow, greens and reddish-orange give the paining a fine power. Is this the moons reflection? Is it the artist going beyond that and celebrating form and colour? It is both. You dont believe in the thing that youre painting, you believe in the thing behind what youre painting said Collins in 1985 Opening a Patrick Collins Exhibition in Cork in 1972, poet John Montague spoke of Collinss work as a dialogue in colour, a mystical experience of light, effecting a bedreamer vision of paint. Oil paint and canvas, [t]he old materials, says Collins, are very simple. Your paint, your canvas it hasnt begun to be exhausted. Collins always painted in artificial light but that never diminished the work. Moonrise on the Lake captures a wonderful, quiet energy. The moons reflection glows bright, shines bright on a calm, muted lake. In an Irish Times interview, 1973, he told Harriet Cooke: I dont think it matters a damn. A good play is never better because it is put on in the open air. Plein air, al fresco, it doesnt matter at all adding that [a]rt explains humanity; its outside nature. Its a necessity, an impetus, a force. When Patrick Collins died, Aidan Dunne rightly recognised him as one of the finest Irish painters of the century and one of the select few to have contributed to an Irish artistic identity. Niall MacMonagle, February 2020 Patrick Collins HRHA (1911-1994) Moonrise on the Lake Oil on canvas, 65 x 92cm (25½ x 36¼'') Signed In Patrick Collins A View on Painting, broadcast on RTÉ in 1985, Collins speaks of how The title is nearly always a clue to a picture and its the only effort the artist can make to give you some literary statement that helps you with a picture. Its called something so therefore you look for something. Its called A Valley at Sunset or The Lakes of Killarney, A Street Scene, Still Life. All these things will help you look for this. But again theres the con

Auction archive: Lot number 107
Auction:
Datum:
2 Sep 2020
Auction house:
Adams's
St Stephens Green 26
D02 X665 Dublin 2
Ireland
info@adams.ie
+353-1-6760261)
Beschreibung:

Patrick Collins HRHA (1911-1994) Moonrise on the Lake Oil on canvas, 65 x 92cm (25½ x 36¼'') Signed In Patrick Collins A View on Painting, broadcast on RTÉ in 1985, Collins speaks of how The title is nearly always a clue to a picture and its the only effort the artist can make to give you some literary statement that helps you with a picture. Its called something so therefore you look for something. Its called A Valley at Sunset or The Lakes of Killarney, A Street Scene, Still Life. All these things will help you look for this. But again theres the contradiction. If you just look for what the title suggests, youre going to miss the subtlety of the picture which goes beyond that. Moonrise on the Lake conjures up a romantic, lyrical image but, as Collins himself, suggests it goes beyond a rising moon and lakescape. Look for the lake, look for the moon and they are there but as Collins himself observes the painting goes beyond that. It can be admired for what it is and for what it suggests. Asked, in 1973, about being called an abstract expressionist Collins replied its true in a way. When Im into a picture, Ill always forget the subject . . . . because its the whole flow that important. Moonrise on the Lake is both representational and abstract. What you see is what you get does not apply here. The more you engage with this work, the more rewarding it is. Peter Murray says The painting can mean different things to different people, a vagueness Collins encouraged; his deliberate use of indistinct forms, engulfed or surrounded by an almost tangible atmosphere, freed the art work from the specific and the everyday. This composition features a grey-blue lake at night and in the distance, white and pale yellow bands of light shine out against a darker background. But in Collinss work colour is never a single colour. His palette brilliantly combines different colours and in this instance soft brushstrokes create a quiet movement in the water. In the foreground the brighter, different shapes, the use of strong blacks and whites and the block of colour, with its yellow, greens and reddish-orange give the paining a fine power. Is this the moons reflection? Is it the artist going beyond that and celebrating form and colour? It is both. You dont believe in the thing that youre painting, you believe in the thing behind what youre painting said Collins in 1985 Opening a Patrick Collins Exhibition in Cork in 1972, poet John Montague spoke of Collinss work as a dialogue in colour, a mystical experience of light, effecting a bedreamer vision of paint. Oil paint and canvas, [t]he old materials, says Collins, are very simple. Your paint, your canvas it hasnt begun to be exhausted. Collins always painted in artificial light but that never diminished the work. Moonrise on the Lake captures a wonderful, quiet energy. The moons reflection glows bright, shines bright on a calm, muted lake. In an Irish Times interview, 1973, he told Harriet Cooke: I dont think it matters a damn. A good play is never better because it is put on in the open air. Plein air, al fresco, it doesnt matter at all adding that [a]rt explains humanity; its outside nature. Its a necessity, an impetus, a force. When Patrick Collins died, Aidan Dunne rightly recognised him as one of the finest Irish painters of the century and one of the select few to have contributed to an Irish artistic identity. Niall MacMonagle, February 2020 Patrick Collins HRHA (1911-1994) Moonrise on the Lake Oil on canvas, 65 x 92cm (25½ x 36¼'') Signed In Patrick Collins A View on Painting, broadcast on RTÉ in 1985, Collins speaks of how The title is nearly always a clue to a picture and its the only effort the artist can make to give you some literary statement that helps you with a picture. Its called something so therefore you look for something. Its called A Valley at Sunset or The Lakes of Killarney, A Street Scene, Still Life. All these things will help you look for this. But again theres the con

Auction archive: Lot number 107
Auction:
Datum:
2 Sep 2020
Auction house:
Adams's
St Stephens Green 26
D02 X665 Dublin 2
Ireland
info@adams.ie
+353-1-6760261)
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