For almost ten
years now I have felt and been subjected to the west
coast of Ireland; it has become familiar to me: the
light, the subtle fluctuations of its earth, the
capricious changeability of its water. I want to
penetrate its surface and explore the deeper layers
within. I want to give a definition, a form and shape to
the essence of that which surrounds us. My search leads
me to document the tension between extremes: like the
introverted silence that lies in wait for the thunderous
roar of a storm which is sure to come, like the sun
dried stones on the beach for the approaching tide, like
the grass that flexes before the wind has touched it.
I paint stills
of a landscape tethering on the edge becoming something
else; the point of transmutation that will lead to a
changed horizon which may yet change again only to
return to the point of origin. It is that singular
moment where the has-been becomes unbound and transforms
into a will-be, that unveils the true identity of the
spirit underneath and so becomes an abstraction. (merges
reality in with abstraction)
I document the
fixtures within this mutable visual quantity; the way
the poles on our slipway stand firm and frozen in the
soft evening mist but remain just as rigidly present
when the storms pick up to batter their countenance, the
way they are dry and tall during low tide, but are
steeped beneath the flood twice daily.
Crucially no
matter how caught up in the landscape my work may be, it
remains a probing quest to understand the essence of
things, my life.