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b. 1947. Brian studied at the National College of Art in Dublin, The Ecole Des Arts Appliqués in
Paris,and Loughborough College of Art. He has won many awards over the years and has won the
California Gold Medal from the Royal Dublin Society, for work of outstanding merit. He has been
running his own workshop since 1972, where he makes hollowware and jewellery, both contemporary
and with a Celtic influence. He is also a visiting lecturer at the National College of Art and Design in
Dublin. In conjunction with this over the years, he has visited many galleries,exhibitions, workshops,
and artists, working in various media, in different countries, as a continual process of education. His
studies in Paris at the Ecole des Arts Appliquéshappened at the end of a period in that college
which carried on a wonderful tradition of metalsmithing. This tradition produced many of the
sculptures in Paris, which on casual view, seem to be of cast bronze, but which are in fact made of
sheet bronze or copper. A very well known example of this type of work is the Statue of Liberty in
New York. This was hammered out of sheet copper in Paris and transported to the US for assembly.
From this base and experience,
Brian has a unique insight into the nature of metals, their formation
and plasticity, and their potential as a creative medium. He was one of Irelands participants in the
European Crafts Councils touring exhibition entitled The Bowl In 1980 and he was one of
Irelands sponsored representatives at the World Crafts Council conference in Vienna. He was a
participant representing Ireland in the EEC silversmithing workshop in Copenhagen in 1981, and took
part in the second workshop in Kilkenny in 1983.
In 1987 he was invited by Mr.Harold OConnor to
run a three week silversmithing workshop in Taos, New Mexico.
Brian worked, for a short while in 1988, as
head silversmith with a firm of manufacturing silversmiths in Dublin, working on their individual work.
In 1998 Brian was invited to run one of the Master Classes at the Revere Academy in Sanfrancisco.
Since then he has, between his time as visiting lecturer at the National College of Art, worked on his
commissions, and his range of production jewellery.
Brian has a wide range of skills including,
handraising, forging, chasing, repossess, enamelling, and all the associated techniques, including
designing and the production of working drawings. His policy has been to build a skill based
operation, from which he could, knowing his capability at any point in time, design within that
framework of skills, tools, equipment, and his aesthetic and creative experience. In essence the theory
was, that for every new commission, a new technique could be incorporated in the design, thus
building a very broad range of skills and experience. |
Email.......sworkshops@eircom.net |