A Letter to Eimear Ni Mhathuna at Culturlann

 Re: New Liam Andrews exhibition in the Dillon Gallery, Culturlann.
 
Taispeántas nua ag Dánlann Dillon,  Cultúrlann.  Tá súil agam go mbeidh deis agat bheith linn.
 
 
Dear Eimear,
 
I think I met Liam Andrews as a child..Danny O’Neill..that is what we called him and not Dan, a name which was used by the Bangor bourgeoisie, lived at 4 Hall Street, Conlig, County Down, my native village, along with Gerard Dillon and George Campbell, who came to our shop. George smoked a lot.
 
As a young boy, I delivered the Belfast Telegraph to Danny in his house. He lived opposite to Robin Harvey, my friend, as he was also of Edmund Irvine, the father of Eddie , the F1 Racing Driver, of whom I was the first sponsor through my publishing Company, Pretani Press. The logo of this was created by my friend John Middleton, the son of Colin. His sister Margaret was a friend of my sister Isabel, who now lives near Seattle.
 
John started a gallery named Pretani in Central Avenue in Bangor,where he exhibited his own and his father’s paintings.In my childhood therefore, I amused the little Artist’s Colony in Conlig with my knowledge of the universe and that is where my interest in Gaelic began…
 
Daniel (Danny) O’Neill (1920 – March 9, 1974) was a Romantic painter born in Belfast. The son of an electrician, and himself an electrician by trade, he was largely self-taught, although he briefly attended Belfast College of Art life classes, before working with and studying under fellow Belfast artist Sidney Smith. He quickly developed an expressionist technique, and strong romanticism, with imagery, often full of pathos, evoking the themes of love, life and death

The start of his painting career coincided with the outbreak of World War II and after the 1941 Belfast Blitz he salvaged wood and experimented with wood carving. O’Neill’s first exhibition was at the Mol Gallery in Belfast in 1941. Within five years, Dublin art dealer Victor Waddington became involved, resulting in O’Neill having a regular income which allowed him to give up his day-job as an electrician, and focus on painting full-time.

In 1946 he sold 21 pictures out of 23 at an exhibition at the Waddington Galleries in Dublin and from then on exhibited regularly. In 1949 he visited Paris and was influenced by Georges Rouault, Maurice de Vlaminck and Maurice Utrillo. A number of works followed on which his reputation largely rests, including: Place du Tertre (1949), The Blue Skirt (1949), Knockalla Hills, Donegal (1951) and Birth (1952). His later work, largely brighter in colour, was seen by critics as less successful.] In 1951 his work was shown in the Tooth Galleries, London and he also exhibited there with Colin Middleton in 1954.

In the 1950s, O’Neill moved from Belfast to Conlig, where there was,as I have said, a small artist’s colony that also included George Campbell and Gerard Dillon. Along with Colin Middleton, Gerard Dillon and George Campbell he was one of a group of artists who respected each other’s work and kept in touch over the course of their careers. However, after the closure of the Waddington Gallery in Dublin, O’Neill found it difficult to exist as a painter. He lived in London from 1958 to 1971 and his work in this period was increasingly introspective and often desolate. When he left Conlig, I never saw him again.

In 1970 George McClelland invited O’Neill to exhibit a one man show, Recent Paintings, at his Belfast gallery, and provided O’Neill with accommodation and a studio to work in. It was his first one man show in 18 years and was a complete sell out. However, this return to good fortune was not sustained as McClelland Galleries was badly affected by the civil unrest in Belfast in the early 1970s. O’Neill returned to Belfast in 1971, where he died in 1974.

During his lifetime, O’Neill’s works were primarily exhibited at the Royal Hibernian Academy. More recently, some of his paintings were shown at the Irish Museum of Modern Art as part of a 2005 exhibition of Northern Irish artists.

His work is represented in many collections including the Ulster Museum, Queen’s University Belfast and the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery, Dublin.

 
 Best wishes Ian .
 
 
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