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Genieve Figgis (born 1972 [1]) is an Irish artist who started her artistic career using social media.She is known for her vibrant colors and ghoulish or macabre imagery. According to an article in Flaunt magazine: "Her unique brand of painting—which uses acrylics “slathered heavily” on canvas and often references works of the canon as viewed through a melted macabre filter—is at once ...
Cill Rialaig is a contemporary arts project, ... representative art galleries in Dublin, ... a former magazine publisher also active on Dublin's social scene.
He then attended Trinity College, Dublin, 1970-74 where he studied for an Honours degree in business. He was president of the Art Soc from 1971 to 1974. He had his first exhibition at the Tom Caldwell Gallery on Baggot Street, Dublin with fellow artist Tim Booth, late of Dr. Strangely Strange in 1976. In 1982 he moved to New York and lived in a ...
Dublin Opinion; Fortnight Magazine - Northern Irish political magazine; Gralton magazine - leftist magazine [2] Red Patriot and Voice of Revolution - Maoist, anti-clerical, pro-Irish republican magazines published by the Communist Party of Ireland (Marxist–Leninist) [3] The Ripening of Time - Marxist magazine [3] [4] Kiss (Irish magazine)
He lives in Clontarf, in Dublin, Ireland. Since sometime in the mid-1990s, he has withdrawn from TV, radio and theatre, instead devoting his efforts to poetry. Pat is still part of Ireland's arts scene, sometimes opening Art exhibitions, introducing then-new musicians such as David Gray or launching other people's books.
Noelle Campbell-Sharp (born 1943 in County Wexford) [2] is an Irish artistic promoter, gallerist and philanthropist, formerly a journalist, editor and publisher of multiple Irish magazine titles. She operates an art gallery in Dublin, has been a member of the Arts Council of Ireland, and has led the Cill Rialaig project in County Kerry, which ...
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Kernoff preferred to finish his portraits in a single sitting, and was a prolific painter. From 1926 to 1958, he held an annual solo show in Dublin. Kernoff was a member of the Studio Art Club and the Radical Club. Kernoff executed the decorative design of the Little Theatre in South William Street, Dublin.