Background Image
Table of Contents Table of Contents
Previous Page  90 / 241 Next Page
Information
Show Menu
Previous Page 90 / 241 Next Page
Page Background

59

Daniel O’Neill (1920-1974)

INDECISION, c.1950

oil on board

signed upper left; titled on reverse; with IELA exhibition label also on reverse

34 x 29_in. (86.36 x 74.93cm)

Provenance:

Adam’s, 31 March 1999, lot 86;

Private collection

Exhibited:

Irish Exhibition of Living Art, The National College of Art, Kildare Street, Dublin, 16 August to 10 September 1950,

catalogue no. 74 (£55-0-0)

Indecision is an extremely ambiguous and emotionally charged painting and reveals both O’Neill’s ambition and also

his awareness of his contemporaries. Painted not long after O’Neill had travelled to Paris, where he had painted Place du

Tertre (NMNI) and possibly also The Blue Skirt, which he exhibited the previous year at the Irish Exhibition of Living Art,

Indecision appears to show a Belfast street scene.

While birds often appeared in Colin Middleton’s paintings, often alongside female figures, and cats occurred in those of

Gerard Dillon, animals are seen less regularly in O’Neill’s work. Indecision is a painting which fits more closely alongside

those of his contemporaries than is usual, recalling the Belfast street scenes Middleton and Dillon had painted in the

early 1940s; but the heightened emotional mood of the work is typical of O’Neill at this period.

In part this mood is expressed through swirling passages of impasto and tenebrist lighting that set a dramatic tone and

give an almost hallucinatory mood to the stark setting. This setting is highly theatrical; light pours from a streetlight and

two illuminated windows in a building behind the girl (although she appears to be facing a light source as well). Her

simplified, mask-like features prefigure similarly treated figures in a slightly later painting such as Birth (1952), as well as

recalling O’Neill’s interest in painting puppets. This anonymity allows him to use the girl’s posture to express emotions of

doubt and uncertainty, with her shoulders weighed down and her feet poised on the edge of the pavement and half in

shadow, appearing to being about to carry her cat away from the brightly lit buildings behind her.

The cat seems to capture something of the girl’s personality as well as her vulnerability and social isolation. Her pink-ish

coat or cardigan recalls the red waistcoats that are so often worn by men in O’Neill’s early work, and along with her red

beret, the use of colour isolates her from the street scene behind. The exact nature of the situation appears elusive but

it is interesting to note that in the 1940s O’Neill had exhibited paintings with titles such as Trapped, Reverberation and

Meditation by the Sea, suggesting that he found these almost Victorian themes extremely stimulating in the subjects

they suggested.

Dickon Hall

April 2015

€ 20,000.00- € 30,000.00 (£14,930-£22,390 approx.)

Large Image & Place Bid Lot 59

IMPORTANT IRISH ART · 25 MAY 2015 AT 6PM