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Anthony |
Biography
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Contact - amurphy@wanadoo.fr |
Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1956 Education
Solo Exhibitions Group Exhibitions |
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France and Ireland
The problem for the Cathars, and for many others, has always been interference by other people. But today at least in the French Department of Aude, and equally in county Galway Ireland, the desolation and wildness make no claim on me, and I am left free to develop my painting in accordance with my beliefs. In both France and Ireland I go and sit in a bar or brasserie. A painter in the corner of a bar in Ireland is treated like a slow-witted conjuror, someone about whom one can't be too sure; in France the reaction My father and his brother passed on to me their love of Ireland. My father restored a ruined castle, Carraigin, on Lough Corrib, where I go to paint; and my uncle Richard Murphy lived and worked as a poet in Cleggan, on the west coast. After Oxford, I went out to live in county Galway. Trial and error are my great masters. A painting is nothing more or less than a series of brush strokes; and of each stroke one may say: "If you like it, leave it; if you don't, wipe it off." In my search for colours that move, much of a picture will end up as rags around my feet. Why some people are painters seems partly to do with this persistent desire to correct and alter the image. This persistence and tenacity can suggest that the completed image exists somewhere already, in the way Plato proposed. In fact a quiet hope of mine is to discover, on death, that the heavenly substance from which, say, all pears draw their "pearness", looks a bit like one of my paintings. Montreal d'Aude, France |
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