Felim
Egan was born in lreland in 1952 and studied in Belfast
and Portsmouth before attending the Slade School of Art
in London. He then spent a year at the British School at
Rome in 1980 before returning to Dublin.
He is known as a painter of restrained eloquence. His paintings
are built up slowly with layers of thin colour applied to
the surface and stone powder ground into the acrylic. The
work is universal in spirit and at the same time emotionally
intimate. His paintings are epiphanic, in that they convey
to us the essential nature or meaning of something of which
we were previously unaware. He is an abstract artist, a
painter of quite formal abstract images, and yet his work
is tied to the place he lives and works, to the long horizons,
big skies and empty sands of the Strand and sea. In this
way his abstract paintings are almost landscapes, with a
magical quality that his neighbour, the poet Seamus Heaney,
has aptly described “ a balance of shifting brilliances”.
Egan has exhibited widely across Europe with 48 solo exhibitions
since 1979 including major shows at the lrish Museum of
Modern Art, Dublin,1996 and the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam,
1999.
In 1981 he represented Ireland at the Xie Biennale de Paris
and in 1985 at the San Paulo Bienal. In 1993 he won the
prestigious UNESCO prize in Paris, and in 1995 the Premiere
Prize at Cagnes-sur-Mer. His work hangs in numerous public
collections including the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, the
Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York, and the collection of the European Parliament.
Major Commissions include; Dublin Castle; O’Reilly
Hall, UCD; Meeting House Square, Temple Bar; Pavilion Theatre,
Dunlaoghaire and the National Gallery of Ireland.
Felim Egan is a member of Aosdána.