White Stag Exhibition at IMMA in Ireland
Wednesday, 06 July 2005 11:49
DUBLIN, IRELAND.- An exhibition of works by members of the White Stag Group, a number of Irish and international artists active in Ireland in the late 1930s and 1940s, opens to the public at the Irish Museum of Modern Art on Wednesday 6 July 2005. The exhibition, entitled The White Stag Group, comprises some 80 works and reflects the youthful dynamism and energy which artists such as Basil Rakoczi, Kenneth Hall, Paul Egestorff and others brought to the Irish art scene, when they settled here, mainly as conscientious objectors, at the outbreak of World War II. Works by Irish artists who became associated with the group, including Patrick Scott and Bobby Dawson, are also being shown. The White Stag Group grew up mainly around Rakoczi and Hall. Rakoczi was born in London in 1908 of mixed Irish and Hungarian parentage. He trained as an artist in Britain and France before founding the group with Hall, a self-taught English artist, in 1935. They moved to Ireland in 1939 attracted, like a number of other pacifists and refugees, by Ireland’s neutral status in relation to the War.
The group held its first exhibition in Dublin in April 1940, followed by a second show in October of the same year, which was opened by Mainie Jellett. In her view the group was the prime focus for Modernism in Ireland and the aim of those involved was “to interpret the times in which we live”, without being linked to any particular school or “cramped by academic conventionality”. Many other exhibitions followed. The vigour and vitality with which the group influenced the Irish arts scene in the War years is clearly evident in the works in the exhibition. Hall’s Pink Bird, 1943-45, and Many Birds, 1943-44, are part-Surrealist and part-Symbolist in derivation, the latter showing the final phase of his subjective style, in which he simplified the appearance of the creatures he painted to a near symbol of their species, while at the same time emphasizing their natural attributes and habitat. Rakoczi’s Surrealist-inspired images Child Flying and Three, both 1943, are typical of his work at this time and illustrate his playful psychological fantasies.
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