Anne Madden
Born1932
NationalityBritish
EducationChelsea School of Arts & Crafts
Known forAbstract painting
SpouseLouis Le Brocquy
Websitehttps://www.anne-madden.com

Anne Madden (born 1932) is an English-born painter, who is well known in both Ireland and France where she has divided her time since her marriage to Louis le Brocquy in 1958.

Early life

Anne M. Madden was born in London in 1932 to an Irish father and an Anglo-Chilean mother. Madden spent her first years in Chile, where her Father owned a farm.[1] Madden's family moved to Corrofin, Ireland when she was ten years old.[2] She subsequently moved to London and attended the Chelsea School of Arts and Crafts.[3]

Her father died in a car crash when she was a teenager. She also lost her sister and brother-in-law in a plane crash, which left Madden as guardian to three young children. Her brother died at a young age of injuries sustained by falling down the stairs. Her work was then interrupted for three years in the 1950s by a series of operations on her spine following a riding accident.[4] During that time she met the painter Louis le Brocquy who was then working in London. They married in Chartres Cathedral in 1958 and set up house and studio in Carros in the south of France, where they remained until 2000.[5]

1950s

Madden began exhibiting in group shows in London when she was eighteen. One of her earliest exhibitions was with the New English Art Club.[6] The Burren and her love of lonely places informed these early paintings.[1]

In 1956 Madden visited the groundbreaking Modern Art in the United States exhibition at the Tate Gallery which began the assimilation of post-war American art, and in particular the influence of abstract expressionism, into her own works.[7] In the late 1950s Madden was impressed by the works of Sam Francis and Jean-Paul Riopelle after viewing their works at the Royal Academy.[8] She later met these artists in Paris along with Joan Mitchell and others with whom she exchanged works. The techniques employed included palette knife and paint flows and soon involved the use of multiple canvases as a means of creating pictorial interactions.

From 1954 Madden regularly contributed works to the Irish Exhibition of Living Art. At the 21st anniversary show, in 1964, she was awarded the painting prize of £150 for Promontory.[9][10]

1960s

In 1960 Madden had a solo exhibition in the Dawson Gallery, Dublin[3] which was a resounding success. The Irish Times reviewer commented,

"Anne Madden paints landscape with a quite remarkable power to dredge away the soft clothing which covers the land. She reveals the bones, the skeleton, not in the sense that such forms conote decay but rather to recall the simple grandeur which remains in winter snows or when wind has ripped away the foliage."[11]

In the mid 1960s on, their comparatively reclusive life in Carros village was changed by the opening of the Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul, where over the years they were constantly meeting painters, sculptors, writers, poets, and musicians forming friendships resumed in Paris and elsewhere.[12] Madden was the first recipient of the Carroll Prize in 1964.[13] Madden also had a solo exhibition at the New Gallery in Belfast in the autumn of 1964.[10]

In 1965 Anne Madden represented Ireland at the Paris Biennale, before regularly exhibiting in that city.[1] From the 1960s she began to paint a series of abstract landscapes influenced by her time as a young girl in the west of Ireland, near the Burren in County Clare. In 1966 Madden was one of four invited artists to show at the 9th annual exhibition of the Ulster Society of Women Artists in Belfast.[14]

1970s

Between 1970 and 1979 Madden painted a large series of vertical works, their size determined by her height and reach. The works derived from megaliths and other prehistoric monuments were reflections on life and death. These works tended to be hard-edged and dark in tone. Madden stated that they were an overt reflection of The Troubles in Northern Ireland,

"They tended to be dark tonally, reflections of grief, of the Irish landscape, of an instinctive search to find or extract light from darkness; elegies of personal grief but also to the terrible and tragic events in Northern Ireland."[15]

Madden showed work at the Oireachtas Exhibition in 1971[9] and had three solo exhibitions in 1974 - at the Ulster Museum, Belfast, the New Art Centre, London, and at the Dawson Gallery in Dublin.[16] Madden held a further one-man show, at the Arts Council of Northern Ireland Gallery in 1979.[17]

1980s onwards

In the 1980s Madden stopped painting for a time and devoted herself to drawing. This resulted in a series of large works in graphite and oil paint on paper entitled Openings. These works formed the core of an exhibition at the Fondation Maeght in 1983. Three of those works were then displayed as part of ROSC '84 when Madden was one of nine Irish artists invited to show.[3] A self-portrait of Madden was amongst 15 new exhibits inaugurated to the National Self Portrait Collection of Ireland in a show at the Kneafsey Gallery, Limerick, in spring 1987.[18] Madden held a one-woman show of new works at the Taylor Gallery in Dublin in 1987.[19]

In 1990 Madden held a solo show at the Kerlin Gallery in Dublin,[6] where she was to return with Drawings of Masters in 1992.[20] Madden returned to painting on canvas. She continued to develop and produce a large body of work which was presented in an Arts Council of Ireland retrospective in 1991, at the Royal Hibernian Academy in Dublin.[3]

In 1994 Madden received a commission from Ronald Tallon, architect of the O'Reilly Hall at University College Dublin, to paint one of ten large paintings displayed within the Aula Maxima. In 1999 the French village of Carros commissioned Madden to paint a large vaulted ceiling painting measuring 54m² for its medieval castle which opened as an international contemporary art centre. The artist produced Empyrius in her nearby studio before it was mounted in situ as a permanent installation. The venue also has a permanent room dedicated to Madden's work.[12]

In 2000, Madden returned to live and work in Dublin,[21] taking over a property which was once Sarah Purser's studio. Madden who was a naturalist had grown vines and olives in France, which led her to present a collection entitled The Garden of Love at the Taylor Galleries in 2002.[22] Madden showed once more with the Hugh Lane Gallery in 2017 in Colours of the Wind, a series of new works referencing Ariadne's golden thread, which the mythic figure gave to Theseus when he went into the Minotaur's labyrinth.[4]

Madden has been a member of Aosdána since 1986.[1] In 1994, she published a biography about her husband entitled Louis le Brocquy: Seeing His Way. The couple had two sons, Pierre and Alexis, born in 1961 and 1963 respectively. In 2004 she was conferred with an honorary degree by University College Dublin and was made an Officier de l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres by the French Government the same year.[23]

Her husband Louis died on 25 April 2012.[24]

Legacy

Madden's work can be found in many public and private collections across the globe, including the Ulster Museum, the Arts Council of Ireland collection, the Arts Council of Northern Ireland, Arts Council of England, Centre National d'art Contemporain Georges Pompidou, Museu Picasso, Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris,[4] Musée du Louvre,[23] Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery, Trinity College, Dublin, and the National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Irish art of the seventies: Modernist Irish art 1960-1990. Cork: Crawford Art Gallery. 2007. p. 108. ISBN 978-0948037-344.
  2. Carty, Ciaran (7 July 1991). "Knowing your place". Sunday Tribune. p. 23. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Finlay, Sarah (1989). The National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland, Volume one, 1979-1989. Limerick: University of Limerick Press. p. 180. ISBN 0-95034-277-7.
  4. 1 2 3 O’Riordan, Alan (26 May 2017). "My life in colour - Anne Madden on artistic success and a life in France and Ireland". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  5. Barber, Fionna (2013). Art in Ireland since 1910. London: Reaktion books. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-78023-512-7.
  6. 1 2 Arnold, Bruce (15 January 1990). "Snow Queen thaws". Irish Independent. p. 8. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  7. Barber, (2013), p.153-154
  8. Barber, (2013), p.154
  9. 1 2 3 Stewart, Ann M (1997). Irish art societies and sketching clubs: index of exhibitors, 1870-1980, M-Z. Vol. 2. Dublin: Four Courts Press. p. 480. ISBN 1-8518232-8-X.
  10. 1 2 Bowyer, A W (14 September 1964). ""Pop Art" exhibition". Belfast Telegraph. p. 10. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  11. "Paintings by Anne Madden". Irish Times. 11 October 1960. p. 7. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  12. 1 2 Ferguson, Ciara (26 November 2000). "Two artists, one life". Sunday Independent. p. 42. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  13. Irish women artists: from the eighteenth century to the present day. Dublin: National Gallery of Ireland & the Douglas Hyde Gallery. 1987. p. 57.
  14. "Women's art on show". Belfast Telegraph. 3 October 1966. p. 3. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  15. Barber, (2013), p.193
  16. Wallace, Roberta (14 October 1974). "Anne has work done to a fine art". Belfast Telegraph. p. 6. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  17. "What is this thing called art?". Belfast Telegraph. 16 November 1979. p. 7. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  18. Fallon, Brian (6 May 1987). "Faces in the crowd". Irish Times. p. 8. Retrieved 8 April 2021.
  19. "Art". Evening Herald. 17 July 1987. p. 21. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  20. Arnold, Bruce (20 April 1992). "The point of paint". Irish Independent. p. 8. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
  21. Barber, (2013), p.266
  22. Rock, Helen (19 May 2002). "Just hanging out". Sunday Tribune. p. 73. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  23. 1 2 "Anne Madden - Life and death in the garden - Taylor Galleries". www.taylorgalleries.ie. Archived from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 18 February 2021.
  24. Artists le Brocquy dies at his home The Examiner, 2012-04-25.
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