Coll, John
John Coll is one of Irelands most prominent figurative sculptors. He has sculpted many works of national importance including monuments to the poet Patrick Kavanagh and the writer Brendan Behan on the Dublin canals. Other large-scale projects include a monument to Countess Markievicz in Rathcormac, Co Sligo and locally a life-size portrait of the racehorse "Bobby-Jo" in Mountbellew, Co Galway.
More recently he completed a portrait of an tUachtarán Michael D. Higgins for the Office of Public Works and a monument to the singer Luke Kelly in South King Street, Dublin.
He has exhibited widely in Europe and held a one-man show in New York in 1998. His work is found in many collections including the Bank of Ireland collection, The National Museum Collins Barracks, The Irish Museum of Modern Art, The National Library of Ireland Collection and Stanford University, California, USA.
John Coll's first one-man exhibition was in Kennys Art Gallery, Galway in 1985. Since then he has had shows in Galway in 1987, 1989 and 1991 and in Sligo in 1988. He has featured in many group shows, most notably as a prize-winner in the Oireachtas. He has had a number of private commissions, including portraits of Benedict Kiely, Brendan O'hEithir and Francis Stuart, and of the late Siobhán McKenna. He has two important commissions in Galway, in the City Hall and in Celtic International. His most recent was the artwork for the Dublin Literary Parade in St. Patrick's Park. He has worked on important projects with John Behan, with Eamonn O'Doherty and with Macnas.
There are two major developments in his approach, firstly in terms of the medium he uses. For some considerable time, his output was almost exclusively in stainless steel, but he began to feel the need for a more malleable or textile medium. This, together with a desire to introduce some colour into his forms brought about a change to non-ferrous metal, such as copper, brass and especially bronze.
The second major change is due to the fact that he now lives in Dublin. This has moved him away from the birds, plants and fishes of the West to the human figure - to the butchers, the carters, the sculptors and above all the writers of Dublin. John Coll is especially drawn to Beckett - because of the honesty and humanity of his work and because of his amazing face.
During the summer of 2000 the distinguished artist made a return visit to Galway with an exhibition entitled 'Upon Reflection'. This was John's seventh solo exhibition with The Kenny Gallery since 1985. Each of these shows meant a change in style, and as his work shows a constant willingness to experiment with new ideas and different media.
Exhibitions
One-man shows in the Kenny Gallery, Galway, Ireland in 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1998, 2000, 2002 and 2005
One-man show at the Sligo Arts Festival, Sligo, Ireland in 1988
Participant in Group Shows in the James Gallery, Dalkey, Co. Dublin, Ireland
The Light Behind the Written Word: exhibition in the Allied Irish Bank Centre, 405 Park Avenue, New York, in 1998. A one-man show comprising twenty five cast bronze sculptures inspired by Irish writers and their work
Exhibited at all the major national shows in Ireland, including the Royal Hibernian Academy (1991, 1992,1993), and the Oireachtas Exhibition (prize-winner 1988)
Founder member of the Western Artists Group (founded 1988)
Exhibitions with the Island Connection group in Spain (1993) and Ireland
Participant in an exhibition of Contemporary Irish Art, in Boston, USA, in 1990
Participant in "Espace", an exhibition of works of fifty sculptors form all the European Community member states, held in Dublin in 1991, to celebrate its status as European City of Culture
Participant in Famine, an exhibition organised by the George Moore Society in Claremorris in 1995. This exhibition travelled to the USA, Canada and Northern Ireland. It commemorated the 150th anniversary of the "Great Famine" in Ireland, and comprised works by 35 invited artists on the famine theme
Amsterdam Sculptors Collective Invitation Exhibition, 1997
Border Crossing, an exhibition of eight Irish artists in Gallery Ravel, Spring Street, Soho, New York, 1998
Group exhibition on the theme of "Hurling " the Kenny Gallery, Galway. 2001
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