Barbara Warren RHA (28 August 1925 – 10 May 2017) was an Irish painter.[1][2] She was a member of Aosdána, an elite Irish association of artists.[3]
Barbara Warren | |
---|---|
Born | 28 August 1925 |
Died | 10 May 2017 | (aged 91)
Nationality | Irish |
Alma mater | National College of Art and Design Regent Street Polytechnic |
Known for | oil painting, portrait |
Style | Representational |
Spouse | William Carron |
Children | 1 |
Elected | Aosdána (1990) |
Early life
editWarren was born in 1925; her father worked in a printers, while her mother was from a County Tipperary Quaker family. She attended the French School in Bray and Alexandra College. In 1943 she moved to Belfast to perform war work, maintaining Lancaster bombers.
Career
editWarren studied at the National College of Art and Design (NCAD, Dublin) and at Regent Street Polytechnic (London), and then under André Lhote in Paris. She exhibited widely from 1950, winning a Purser-Griffith travel scholarship in the history of European painting in 1955.[4]
She taught at NCAD between 1973 and 1984. She was elected to the RHA in 1989 and Aosdána in 1990, receiving the James Kennedy Memorial Award for portraiture from the RHA in 1990, and career achievement prize at the 1999 Florence Biennale.[4]
She worked in still life, interiors, figure studies and landscapes. Her paintings are held by the Office of Public Works, Ulster Museum, Irish Museum of Modern Art, The National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland and Haverty Trust.[5] According to The Irish Times, "Her thoughtful, considered mode of stylised realism never became formulaic. Each painting was a new puzzle to be approached on its own terms. She was regarded as the last surviving link with a generation of Irish women artists who studied in France and effected a major shift in 20th-century Irish art."[6]
Personal life
editWarren married William Carron, another artist, in 1961; they lived in Howth and had one child, Rachael. Barbara Warren died in 2017.[6] She was a friend of the artists Elizabeth Rivers and Kitty Wilmer O'Brien.[7]
References
edit- ^ Ryan, Wanda (28 May 1987). Irish Women Artists: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present Day. National Gallery of Ireland. ISBN 9780903162401 – via Google Books.
- ^ McCrum, Seán; Lambert, Gordon (28 May 1985). Living with Art, David Hendriks. Wolfhound Press. ISBN 9780863270635 – via Google Books.
- ^ Mulrooney, Deirdre (28 May 2006). Irish Moves: An Illustrated History of Dance and Physical Theatre in Ireland. Liffey Press. ISBN 9781904148920 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b webmaster, Arts Council (14 June 2017). "Arts Council expresses its regret at the passing of Barbara Warren". www.artscouncil.ie.
- ^ "Barbara Warren". IMMA.
- ^ a b "'The last surviving link with a generation of Irish women artists'". The Irish Times.
- ^ "'As a child it felt like parkland' - €850k family home of two artists in Howth goes on the market". independent. 23 March 2018.