Press Reviews

Connacht Sentinel

Tuesday 4th Dec 2001

Dubhdarra

Bunowen

At Sea

Tourmakeady

Rockfleet

Burrishoole

Granuaile sculpture

Tiger in the Sky

Jill Teck's new exhibition inspired by a trip Down Under.

Tiger in the Sky, an exhibition of new paintings by Jill Teck, has opened in the Town Hall Theatre.

This year, Jill Teck went on a trip to Australia to spend several months with her family. On the way she visited Thailand, Laos, and Bali, and on her way home to Ireland, Fiji.

Jill Teck feels that this journey will have long reaching influences and inspiration for her work, and for this show, with the time available, she says she has only been able to make a beginning.

As she is coming back to oil painting after a long absence, she felt the need to experiment a bit, and there is quite a variety of work.

Jill Teck has a great interest in symbolism, and several of the paintings come from her unconscious reaction to animals or sculptures that she met on her way, such as Phet a very special tiger whom she met in Laos.

Others derive from her fascination at what is seen. On the other side of our familiar world, lies another place. Particularly in Australia, she was interested in the connection of place and person, and how the one influenced the other, and each contained beneath the surface. Each painting derives from something seen, something noticed, something felt, if only an atmosphere or colour.

Jill Teck has allowed them to grow in their own way, in order to explore these connections. She hasn't yet had time to do any work about Bali, it almost needs another trip and show of it's own. "When I began this exhibition", Jill Teck says, "I had no idea how it would turn out, and it has been great fun"

Jill Teck is well known not just in Galway for her many previous exhibitions, her donations of work to University College Hospital, her book of self portraits about Leukaemia, 'Becoming The Tree', and its adaption as a dramatised presentation.

Jill Teck is becoming increasingly recognised in Ireland and internationaly not only through exhibiting her work but also through her website JillTeck.com designed by EireInSite the international award winning Art Site developers.

Irish Examiner

Tuesday 27th February 2001

Pic 1

 

The perfect blend of technology and true Technique

A former welder turned website designer and a Connemara based artist getting over a life treathening illness have between them won an international Internet - award with a little inspiration from Riverdance.

Jill teck, artist, sculptor, author of the on-line exhibition JillTeck.com, developed by EireInSite, has won the International Webmasters, World Web Award of Excellence, only the second Irish site to do so.

On a personal basis Jill Teck has won the Artspace2000 award for art site and has received a number of other citations.

Galway Advertiser

Praying Nun

Search for the Power of Life

(Presentation of paintings to University College Hospital)

'It was a moving occasion and among the many people who turned up were nurses who had cared for Jill Teck during her treatment. Matron of UCHG, Brigid Howley, welcomed Jill's very generous gesture and spoke of the need in general to improve the hospital environment for patients. "These paintings will go a long way towards achieving that goal", she said. "In the past, hospitals have been seen as very bland, dull places, but people are now recognising it doesn't have to be like that. We are keen to develop art in the hospital. We do have a lot of walls," she added with a laugh.

Magpie

November

2000

Phet

Fiji

Mekong

Hen

Fiji Woman

Blue Elephant

Buddahs

Pic 2

Mekong

Children Swimming

Tiger

Yin & Yang

My Garden

Baloons

PAINTING THE RIVER

Jill Teck is an artist living and working in Galway city for the last 2 years. Before that she lived in Roundstone where her husband had a shellfish export business. The house they lived in there was the one previously owned by Sting. Locally it was known as 'Kate O'Brien's house' and Jill Teck painted several portraits of her one of which hangs in the library in Roundstone. When they moved on they sold the house to Bill Whelan who now lives there and has a recording studio.

Painting and art are talents Jill Teck inherited from her mother and her mother's father before that, it was only in 1984 that Jill Teck herself started to paint in earnest. Her work is predominantly in watercolours and while some paintings are strong and striking there is a pastel lightness to their colouring in general. The shapes and images are recognisable too from painting to painting, globes and curves in patterns. 2 years ago Jill cast her first bronze sculpture, an expensive undertaking with a lot of investment both of time and money to arrive at the final piece of work.


Jill Teck uses subjects that appeal to her and recently decided she would like to do some work involving dance. "I love music, dancing and colour," she says. She was going to see Riverdance the Show in Dublin during the summer and mentioned to Bill Whelan that she would like to sketch there. He suggested that she make a project of it and organised an access pass for her for the show. Jill Teck spent 2 evenings sketching behind the scenes and in the auditorium. It was fascinating. In all she saw the show three times and was surprised by the content. "I didn't know there was a story there, the emergence of the Irish race, the history portrayed through ephemeral effects, there were such contrasts and the stage set was at times other worldly and spiritual, it was beautiful." Behind the scenes was another world entirely and the blackness of it all struck Jill Teck. "I was sketching in the dark whether back stage or in the auditorium." She sketched anything that caught her attention from a technician shinnying up a rope to the musicians tuning up.

One of the most fascinating subjects for her was a dancer who didn't want to warm up and just lay on the floor. The sketches are vignettes or little glimpses of the goings on and while they will not be a literal portrayal of Riverdance they are likenesses and overall impressions of the activity around the show. Some are abstract and some are fantasies based on what she saw. Jill Teck uses her memory and imagination to convert her sketches into pictures. They are in her own words "light-hearted and decorative". Jill Teck has also cast two sculptures and produced some thirty paintings for the project that will go on show on November 24th at 6pm in the library in Roundstone. Bill Whelan is opening the exhibition and it coincides with his own performance later that evening with the Irish Chamber orchestra of his new work 'Inislacken' in the church.


This is by no means Jill Teck's first exhibition or showing, her work is known widely at this stage and the more she does the stronger her own characteristic style becomes. She doesn't belong to any particular school of art; she is not mainstream but specialises in her own style of watercolours. She seldom uses oils even though she does feel that watercolour has limitations. "Every picture is an experiment" she says, " and is individualistic rather than belonging to any particular movement."


Jill Teck's most widely known work to date is probably her series of five self portraits painted following her hospitalisation with leukemia in 1995. She also wrote a commentary which together with the paintings was published as a book called 'Becoming the Tree'. It is a story of sickness and healing. Jill Teck used mental energy to effect much of the healing herself and explains that process together with the medical treatment in this inspirational read.

She has studied psychotherapy, identifies with the work of the Indian Deepak Chopra and teaches or facilitates groups in his Seven Spiritual Laws of Success. This year she completed the Irish Institute of Training and Development's diploma course and has worked with both the Wheelchair Association and Macnas, combining both activities by bringing the wheelchair group into the Macnas parade this year in Galway.


Ever active, Jill Teck's next ambition is to study Art therapy, she would love to write another book and then of course there's travel. But for now she is hard at work putting the finishing touches to her dancers and singers with the full weight of those seven spiritual laws guiding her all the way.
'Dancing the River' opens on November 24th in the Library, Roundstone.

EMail