1 March–5 April 2003
Crawford Municipal Art Gallery is delighted to present a retrospective of the
artist Pat
Moran. To mark the tenth
anniversary of his death over forty-five works have been assembled to
provide a comprehensive overview of this fascinating and much
respected artist.
Pat
Moran's work centres on an almost 'romantic' vision of cityscapes and
provides an enthralling and very personal record of the changing urban
environments of Dublin and Cork. His work is lucid, responsive and
communicates an intimacy of place and a real affection for lived in,
often shabby and neglected spaces of
urbanity.
Pat Moran was born in Port Laoise in 1961. He
studied Fine Art Painting at Dun Laoghaire School of Art and Design
and at the National College of Art and Design from 1982 - 1983. His
working life was mostly spent in Dublin in various studios and
derelict buildings throughout the city. In addition he spent a year
painting in Italy in 1984 - 1985 and travelled in Mexico studying
mural painting in 1986.
He exhibited his work regularly in group shows and had
his first one-man exhibition Local Colour in the Temple Bar
Gallery in 1988. He was involved in a number of community art and
mural projects throughout Dublin. In 1990, Moran moved to Cork,
as part of the Triskel Arts Centre's Artists in Residence scheme and
worked from a studio in the Cork Artists' Collective. His work matured
and developed considerably during this period culminating with his
second solo show at the Triskel Arts Centre in 1991. He continued to
live in Cork and became involved in the Artist in Prison scheme as a
teacher in Port Laoise Prison. Pat was in the process of moving back
to Dublin when he died on Sherkin Island, Whit Weekend 1992.
This exhibition, which will tour to Dunamaire Arts Centre, Port Laoise
will raise the public profile of this very accomplished artist and
will provide a definitive record of Pat Moran's work through the
publication of an extensive catalogue published by Gandon with an
essay by Aidan Dunne.
"Pat Moran painted pictures and he painted pictures
of what he knew and experienced. The honesty to paint cars - no one
paints cars in the romance language of cityscape. Giddily leaning
lampposts clawing in to blue and green streetscapes - black and white
expressions of inner city grubbiness. Pat painted as he lived with
vitality and directness, and of course in the usual confusions of our
being" (Richard Gorman, 2001)


