GRANUAILE SERIES
Exhibition to Crete, October 2002
Oil Paintings and Sculptures
The idea for this exhibition came from a suggestion by one of the actors in the recent Macnas performance of Granuaille (see Here at Macnas). I found that the theme enabled me to see in a new light landscape and places with which I have a strong connection, namely Connemara and Mayo. I could connect history, legend and the present. I could also see in the work a larger connection with women's lives. There is a life story here - from protected girl to young woman with aspirations for adventure, from the many voyages (sometimes we are at sea and alone) to the traveller in need of respite, from the warrior defending home to the final resting place. It is a theme for further exploration.
By JILL TECK
© Jill Teck 2002
Click on paintings to enlarge
Dubhdarra 114.5 cms x 84 cms |
Dubhdarra, or Black
Oak, was the name given to Owen O'Malley, Grace's father.
|
|
Bunowen 81 cms x 102 cms |
As a young woman,
Grace lived at Bunowen in Connemara. Her old tower by the sea
has since been replaced by a grander version. |
|
At Sea 91.5 cms x 66 cms |
One of many Voyages
Sometimes in life we are alone and at sea |
|
Tourmakeady 114.5 cms x 84 cms |
A Resting Place between
Connemara and her castles in Mayo
|
|
Rockfleet 81cms x 66 cms |
Granuaile frequently
had to defend
this tower, one of her last homes. |
|
Burrishoole 66 cms x 82 cms |
The Abbey at Burrishoole
may be
her final resting place. |
|
GRACE O'MALLEY, PIRATE QUEEN
The story of Grace O'Malley (Granuaille) combines legend and history. There
are few recorded facts, but the outline of her life is known. I have used my
imagination for the rest. Grace became a Pirate Queen in the far west of Ireland
in the 16th Century - a time when Ireland was struggling for its life against
the power of England. She represents an old Ireland - an Ireland of autonomous
tribes, fiercely independent. Unfortunately it was this independence of spirit
which perhaps contributed to the inability of the tribes to unite against the
invader - that and the failure of their Spanish allies to reach England with
the Armada.
Grace was renowned for her courage, her seamanship, and her leadership. She refused to succumb to the punitive tactics of her English oppressors and even sailed to England to meet Queen Elizabeth I in an era where she could easily have been beheaded. All of this she combined with running her estates and mothering the three children of two marriages.