Patricia Hurl (born 1943) is an Irish artist.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4]
Background
Hurl was born in 1943 in Dublin. She had three sisters and one brother. Hr mother died of cancer when Hurl was 17.[ 4] [ 2] [ 5] [ 6] Hurl's father, born in 1894, was a Catholic from a farming background who grew up along the Derry -Antrim border. He worked as a primary school teacher and was politically active, becoming involved in the Ulster Troubles . Hurls parents moved to Charleston Avenue, Ranelagh , Dublin , where they bought their first house. They lived frugally and the family prioritised education.[ 1]
Career
Before becoming an artist, Hurl got a job with Williams and Woods , a Dublin confectionery factory, where she worked as a comptometer operator. Hurl attended the National College of Art and Design in 1975 as a mature student and returned to study at the Dún Laoghaire Institute of Art, Design and Technology , graduating in 1984 with a first class honours Bachelor of Arts in fine art. In 2000, she completed a Master of Arts in interactive multimedia at Institute of Technology, Tallaght .[ 4] [ 7] [ 3] In the late 1980s and early 1990s, she was a committee member of Women Artists Action Group , a feminist group which promoted women artists from Ireland. From 1984 to 2009, Hurl was a lecturer in fine art at Dublin Institute of Technology College of Art and Design .[ 1] [ 4]
Her first solo exhibition, Living Room Myths and Legends , was shown at the Temple Bar Gallery and Studios in 1988. It included works based on the Kerry babies case .[ 6] [ 2] [ 5] [ 8] Major themes of her work include loss, pain, frustration, and loneliness.[ 9] Her work has been included in The Great Book of Ireland .
In 2012, Hurl established the Damer House Gallery in Roscrea , County Tipperary .[ 10] [ 11] Hurl is a founder member of Na Cailleacha (Irish for witches or hags ), a group of older female Irish artists.[ 6] [ 12] [ 5] [ 13]
In 2023, the Irish Museum of Modern Art held a major retrospective exhibition of Hurl's work. Parts of the collection toured Ireland as the Irish Gothic exhibition, including venues such as The Souce and South Tipperary Arts Centre .[ 5] [ 9]
Awards
Hurl was named one of Irish Tatler ' s Women of the Year 2023.[ 6] In 1984, she won the Norah McGuinness Award for painting and in 2023 she won a Pollock Krasner Award .[ 2] [ 14] [ 15]
Personal life
Hurl married at the age of 20. Her husband, Joe Doherty, worked as a cooper at the Guinness brewery. They lived in Blanchardstown and Deansgrange , raising four children together. The couple separated in 1989 and were later divorced.[ 1] [ 7] [ 4]
Hurl lives in Ballybirt , County Offaly , with her civil partner, Therry Rudin.[ 10] [ 16] [ 7] [ 4]
References
^ a b c d "Patricia Hurl: 'I was talked into buying a cottage that was "safe as gold" – it took 10 years to sell it and move to Dublin' " . www.independent.ie . May 12, 2024.
^ a b c d "Patricia Hurl" . IMMA .
^ a b "The haunted paintings of Patricia Hurl" . Apollo Magazine . March 3, 2023.
^ a b c d e f "A Life Lived - Patricia Hurl" . Totally Dublin . May 1, 2023.
^ a b c d "Patricia Hurl's Irish Gothic - a singular Irish artist celebrated" . May 4, 2024 – via www.rte.ie.
^ a b c d "PATRICIA HURL|Tatler Women of the Year Awards 2023" .
^ a b c Vallig, Marc O'Sullivan (March 27, 2023). "Patricia Hurl: 'I got letters from women saying they were praying for me' " . Irish Examiner .
^ "Do we really need an exhibition of women's art? Yes" . The Irish Times .
^ a b "Dublin: Patricia Hurl - Irish Arts Review" . www.irishartsreview.com . January 1, 2023.
^ a b Byrne, James. "About" . Welcome to Damer House Gallery .
^ Gloss, The (March 6, 2023). "Gloss-ip: The Opening of Patricia Hurl's Exhibition at IMMA" . The Gloss Magazine .
^ "Na Cailleacha: Women's art collective explores age and invisibility" . The Irish Times .
^ "The Hags collective: 'After months of lockdown, it's like being let free to fly' " . The Irish Times .
^ "Grantees – Pollock-Krasner Foundation" .
^ "Work of artist Patricia Hurl will be on display at South Tipperary Arts Centre" . www.tipperarylive.ie . April 25, 2024.
^ "Offaly artist to be featured in new series of RTÉ show" . Offaly Independent . November 20, 2023.