William McKeown

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William McKeown
Born1962
Tyrone, Northern Ireland
Died2011
Edinburgh
NationalityEnglish

William McKeown (15 April 1962 – 25 October 2011) was a Northern Irish painter, watercolourist, and draughtsman. His attention to detail of the installation of his work led him occasionally to create rooms or constructions for their display.

Life[]

McKeown was born to a Presbyterian family in County Tyrone. He was brought up on a farm which remained an inspiration throughout his artistic life.[1] In 1980-81, he studied Art History at the University College, London. In 1984, he graduated in Textile Design at Central School of Art & Design, London. He worked at the Ulster Folk and Transport Museum, demonstrating weaving techniques. In 1987, he graduated with an MA in Design from Glasgow School of Art. McKeown moved to Dublin in Ireland in 1988; he worked at the Kerlin Gallery until 1991. In 1994, he graduated with a Masters in Fine Art at the University of Ulster in Belfast. The Kerlin Gallery presented his first solo show in 1996. McKeown was board member of Temple Bar Gallery and Studios (2002-2005, at the time he had a studio there) and the Douglas Hyde Gallery (2002-2005). From September 2004, he was in residence in the Old Convent in Lismore for one year. In 2006, he moved to Edinburgh. He died in Edinburgh at the age of 49.

Work[]

His abstract paintings (initially on canvas, then on linen) went from monochrome to subtle gradations of tone, which became more gestural, pulsating or woven. McKeown's work has connections with certain aspects of minimalist, post-minimalist, post-painterly and conceptual art.[2] He particularly admired the work of Agnes Martin, for instance. He also made small realistic coloured pencil drawings of the wild flowers typical of his home county (primrose, snowdrop, buttercup), always against stark blank paper.

His sensitivity for light, colour, textiles transferred into his highly considered constructions or rooms (such as Nest (The Bravery of Birds) for the Venice Biennale in 2005). In situ installations were set up with great precision.

A sense of place was often conveyed as titles referenced birds (The Corncrake, Starlings), wildlife, the countryside of his childhood (The Meadow, The Lane, The Hayfield), cities (Hope Painting – Abercromby Place, 2006, Arts Council of Ireland collection), the weather (Cloud Painting, Raining).

McKeown became a member of Aosdána (an association of artists established by the Arts Council of Ireland) in 2008.

Exhibitions[]

Solo exhibitions include “In An Open Room”, Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin, 2001; “The Sky Begins Art Our Feet”, Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast, 2002; “The Room At the Horizon”, Project Arts Centre, Dublin, 2004, “Cloud Cuckoo Land”, Dublin and Edinburgh, 2004; Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, 2008; “Five Working Days”, Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast, 2010 and “The Waiting Room” for the Golden Bough project at the , Dublin, 2011.

Two-person exhibitions include “Pool”, a collaboration with Dorothy Cross at Kerlin Gallery, Dublin, 2010; “A Certain Distance, Endless Light” with Félix Gonzáles-Torres, Middlesbrough Museum of Modern Art, curated by Gavin Delahunty in 2010.

In 2005, William McKeown was invited to represent Northern Ireland at the 51st Venice Biennale, in the exhibition “The Nature of Things” curated by Hugh Mulholland.

Other group exhibitions include East International, Norwich, selected by Tacita Dean and Nicholas Logsdail, 1997; “A Measured Quietude”, The Drawing Center, New York and Berkeley Art Museum, California, 1999; “The Sea & The Sky”, Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin and , Philadelphia, curated by Patrick T. Murphy and Richard Torchia, 2000; “Rooms For Waiting In”, , curated by Michael Dempsey, 2005; “A Dream of Discipline” with Dorothy Cross and Kathy Prendergast, Douglas Hyde Gallery, Dublin, 2006.

Paul Nesbitt curated a solo exhibition at Inverleith House, Royal Botanical Gardens, Edinburgh, in May 2012.

The Holiday Show[]

William McKeown curated “The Holiday Show” at the Royal Hibernian Academy, Dublin, in 2002, presenting work by Maureen Gallace, Darragh Hogan, Isabel Nolan, Gavin O'Curry, Stuart Purdy, Anne Ryan and . In the accompanying catalogue (p. 6), he wrote: “There are two types of art –open and closed. All closed art is negative and anti-life. Art which is open accepts without judgement, is expanding, positive and life enhancing.”

Publications[]

William McKeown. The Sky Begins At Our Feet, Belfast, Ormeau Baths, 2002. Text by Isabel Nolan.

William McKeown, Dublin, Irish Museum of Modern Art / Milan, Charta, 2008. Texts by Chris Arthur, Caroline Hancock,  [es], Corinna Lotz, Declan Long; and poems by Dominic Echlin and William Wordsworth.

References[]

  1. ^ "William McKeown".
  2. ^ http://www.avfestival.co.uk/programme/2010/events-exhibitions/felix-gonzalez-torres-and-william-mckeown-a-certain-distance-endless-light

External links[]

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