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Sean Scully
Seanscully 2.JPG
Born (1945-06-30) 30 June 1945 (age 79)
Dublin, Ireland
Nationality Irish
Education Croydon College of Art (1965–1968)
Newcastle University (1968–1972)

Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University (1972–1973) (graduate fellowship)
Known for Painting, printmaking, sculpture, photography, art and writing
Movement Geometric abstraction and emotional abstraction

Sean Scully RA (born 30 June 1945) is an Irish-born American-based artist working as a painter, printmaker, sculptor and photographer. His work is held in museum collections worldwide and he has twice been named a Turner Prize nominee. Moving from London to New York in 1975, Scully helped lead the transition from Minimalism to Emotional abstraction in painting, abandoning the reduced vocabulary of Minimalism in favor of a return to metaphor and spirituality in art.

Scully has also been a lecturer and professor at a number of universities and his writing and teachings are collected in the 2016 book, Inner: The Collected Writings and Selected Interviews of Sean Scully.

Early life

Sean Scully was born in Dublin, Ireland, on 30 June 1945. Four years later his family moved to London where they lived in a working-class part of south London, moving from lodging to lodging for a number of years. By the age of 9, Scully knew he wanted to become an artist, and from the age of 15 until he was 17, Scully was apprenticed at a commercial printing shop in London as a typesetter, an experience that greatly influenced the art to come.

From the age of 17 until he turned 20, despite working full-time in various jobs including graphic design, and messenger, Scully attended evening classes at the Central School of Art, focused on figurative painting. While working a stint as a plasterer's labourer on the Victoria Station Ballroom, Scully made daily visits to the Tate Milbank to visit Van Gogh's Chair (1888), which made an impression on him. In 1963, at the age of 18, Scully had a job loading trucks with flattened boxes at a cardboard factory. The idea of stacking central to much of his work came from this experience.

Education

In September 1965 Sean Scully, age 20, began to study full-time at Croydon College of Art, London, before moving on to Newcastle University in 1968. At Newcastle University, the University Theatre's production of Samuel Beckett’s Waiting for Godot made a lasting impact on him. Scully was also influenced by a trip to Morocco in 1969, where he became fascinated by the multi-colored stripes locals wove into wool tents and robes. Scully was awarded the Frank Knox Memorial Fellowship in 1972 to attend Harvard University. It was during this first stay in the US that Scully began to experiment with new techniques such as tape and spray paint.

Career

Early career: 1970–1980

Scully's first commercial show, at the Rowan Gallery in London, sold out. During this period Scully taught at the Chelsea College of Art and Design, and Goldsmith's, while continuing to paint in his Elephant Lane studio in Rotherhithe. In 1975, at the age of 30, Scully was awarded a two-year Harkness Fellowship with which he moved to New York.

Once in New York he began to develop important friendships with fellow artists such as Robert Ryman, and others in academic and artistic circles. Scully's response in the 1970s had been to bring the objectives of American Minimalism together with those of Op art, an important current in Europe, creating works using overlays and “supergrids” that bridged these two artistic movements in a new way. Once in New York, Minimalism had a strong influence on his work, and for a few years Scully's palette was reduced to the grey monochrome ‘Black paintings’ series.

Scully began working on the series known as The Catherine Paintings in 1979, while sharing his Duane Street studio with his third wife, the artist Catherine Lee. The idea behind the series was to choose the important painting Scully produced during each year together, that would then become part of a collection named after her. This was the beginning of Sean's own private collection of his work.

Departure from Minimalism: 1980–1982

Backs and Fronts by Sean Scully
Backs and Fronts, 1981, oil on linen and canvas. Kerlin Gallery, Dublin.

By 1980 Scully considered himself to be at war with the movement of Minimalism in New York and wanted to bring more human elements into his art. He made multiple trips to Morocco and Mexico during this time, as he considered these trips to have “a direct bearing on what I think art should be doing – which is concentrating on what’s interesting, engaging, perverse, and beautiful about human nature.” He later commented that “I had decided that what had been stripped out of painting—i.e., the ability to make relationships, to be metaphorical and referential, spiritual, poetic, all those things and aspects of human nature—had to be put back in if painting was to go forward.” In 1981 the first retrospective of Sean Scully's work was held at the Ikon Gallery in Birmingham. This was also the year that Scully's confidence to withdraw from an adherence to Minimalism became apparent, with the return of color and space, and the freehand drawing of stripes and visible brushstrokes, rather than the hard lines of tape. Scully had a breakthrough with the seminal 1981 painting Backs and Fronts, which had a profound impact in the 1982 exhibition 'Critical Perspectives' at the PS1 Contemporary Art Center. This was a watershed painting which British conceptual artist Gillian Wearing has said “broke the logjam of American minimalist painting”.

Geometric Abstraction: 1982–present

In 1982 Scully began to work with the gallerist David McKee, an important relationship that lasted for a decade. During the summer of that year, Scully started producing small multi-panel works on found pieces of wood while staying in Montauk at the Edward Albee artist's colony. These works were titled Ridge, Plum, and Bear after the islands that surround Long Island. He also began applying a combination of rigid geometry and expressive texture and color to larger paintings that year. A prime example of this was Heart of Darkness, inspired by the 1899 novella of the same name. Scully began collaborating with Mohammad O. Khalil in 1983, this was the first time he had collaborated with a printmaker and was the start of a career-long commitment to printmaking. That same year, Scully was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship for Fine Arts.

In 1984, the Museum of Modern Art included Scully in their International Survey of Recent Painting and Sculpture. The following year Scully's first American solo museum exhibition was held at the Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute in 1985, and traveled to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Other major museums also began to acquire Scully's large-scale paintings, despite the dominant trend of the time tending towards Postmodernism. Scully's paintings from this period are heavy and physical in terms of both size and aesthetic, and make use of large-scale stretchers.

By 1987, Scully's work became less complex, flatter and smaller in scale, and began to include lighter color palettes beginning with Pale Fire in 1988. The same year, while experimenting with watercolors on a beach in Mexico, Scully created the first image that would become an extended meditation on architecture and light with the Wall of Light series. In 1989 the Whitechapel Gallery in London held a solo exhibition for Scully, which then traveled to Palacio Velázquez in Madrid and to the Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus in Munich. These were Scully's first solo exhibitions in mainland Europe. The art critic Robert Hughes' 1989 piece for TIME magazine cemented Scully's increasing reputation.

The painting Why and What (Yellow) in 1988 was the first to incorporate an inset element of steel. By 1991 Scully expanded the use of steel, setting oil on linen insets into large steel panels. He also began the regular use of a checkerboard motif at this time, first hinted at in his Taped and Hidden Drawing paintings of the mid-1970s. In 1992, while teaching at Harvard University, Sean Scully revisited Morocco to film the BBC documentary The Artist's Journey: Sean Scully on Henri Matisse, with Matisse having visited Morocco in 1912 - 1913. 1993 saw the first exhibition of The Catherine Paintings, at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas. In 1994 he opened a second studio in Barcelona, and he returned to Morocco in 1995, to spend more time in the country. Atlas Walls is a portfolio of Scully's photographic works taken during this trip.

In 1995 Scully returned to New York, moving into a large new studio in Chelsea, Manhattan. Chelsea Wall was the first painting to be made there. Scully received a number of invitations to speak at academic institutions, and participated in the Joseph Beuys lectures on the state of contemporary art in Britain, Europe and the US, held by the Ruskin School at Oxford University, England. In 1997, Scully's photography was exhibited for the first time at the Sala de Exposiciones Rekalde in Bilbao, Spain.

Scully participated in a colloquium in conjunction with the exhibition Richard Pousette-Dart at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1998. He visited Santo Domingo in 1999, resulting in the photography portfolio Santa Domingo for Nené. That year, Scully's prints were given a retrospective at the Graphische Sammlung Albertina, in Vienna, Austria, and the Musée du Dessin et de l’Estampe Originale in Gravelines. A catalogue raisonné of his prints from 1969 - 1999 was also published.

2001 - 2013

In 2001, the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth acquired the complete Catherine series, eighteen paintings that each represent a year from the period 1979–1996, which was given a dedicated room for permanent exhibition in the new Museum building opened in 2002. In 2002 Scully was appointed Professor of Painting at the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, a position he held through to 2007. A retrospective exhibition opened in 2004 at the Sara Hildén Art Museum in Tampere, Finland, which travelled to Klassik Stiftung Weimar, in Germany, and the National Gallery of Australia. While in Australia, Scully spent time traveling through the red desert interior.

Sean Scully - Raval Rojo - 2004
Raval Rojo, 2004, oil on linen, 92 x 102 cm, Kerlin Gallery, Dublin

Between 2005 - 2006, Sean Scully's Wall of Light series was displayed at museums around the United States. This began with the exhibition Sean Scully: Wall of Light opened at The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C., and traveled to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, the Cincinnati Art Museum, and finally the Metropolitan Museum of Fine Art to great acclaim. The same year Scully travelled with a group of students from the Art Academy in Munich, to Inisheer, an island off the Irish coast. It was here that the Aran portfolio of photographs were taken. In 2006 the Hugh Lane Gallery opened The Sean Scully Room, a dedicated, permanent installation of the artist's work, and the Bibliothèque nationale de France held an exhibition of his prints. Sean Scully: A Retrospective opened in 2007 at the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona, and travelled to the Musée d'art moderne (Saint-Étienne), and the Museo d’Arte Contemporanea Roma (MACRO) in Rome. The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. invited Scully to give the Elson Lecture in 2007.

The retrospective exhibition Constantinople or the Sensual Concealed: The Imagery of Sean Scully opened in 2009 at the MKM Museum Küppersmühlefür Moderne Kunst, in Duisburg, Germany, and traveled to the Ulster Museum, Belfast. In 2010 a tour of important early works from the 1980s started at the Centre for Contemporary Arts, Carlow, Ireland, and then traveled to the Leeds Art Gallery, and the Wilhelm-Hack-Museum in Ludwigshafen am Rhein. In 2011 the Chazen Museum of Art opened their new expansion of the museum with a solo exhibition of Scully's eight-part Liliane paintings on aluminum, and other works. Scully opened nine more solo museum exhibitions in 2012, including Notations: Sean Scully at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, as well as exhibitions at museums like MIMA, Kunstmuseum Bern, the Lentos Kunstmuseum in Linz, and IVAM in Valencia, Spain.

2018

2018 saw Scully have a total of fourteen public exhibitions around the world. This included the installation of the monumental sculpture Boxes of Air in the Cuadra San Cristóbal, in Mexico City, along with paintings installed in the horse stalls of the iconic pink stable block. Other museum shows included: Multimedia Art Museum, Moscow; Hatton and Laing Galleries, Newcastle, UK; De Pont Museum of Contemporary Art, Tilburg, Netherlands; Russian Museum, St Petersburg, Russia; Staatliche Kunsthalle Karlsruhe, Germany; Yorkshire Sculpture Park, UK, among many others.

Opulent Ascension by Sean Scully
Opulent Ascension, 2019, sculpture. Basilica of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice.

In 2019, the exhibition Sean Scully: Sea Star opened at The National Gallery, London, showcasing Scully's work alongside works by J. M. W. Turner. On April 6, 2019, director Nick Willing's documentary film Unstoppable. Sean Scully & The Art of Everything aired nationally in the UK on BBC Two. For the 58th Venice Biennale, Scully presented Sean Scully: Human at the Basilica of San Giorgio Maggiore, an exhibition of recent paintings and a new sculpture titled Opulent Ascension under the dome of the High Renaissance church by Palladio.

Other works

Music

Scully's mother Holly was a Vaudeville singer, and Sean Scully became heavily influenced by rhythm and blues in his adolescence. Scully owned and ran an R&B Club as a teenager in South London, and was briefly in an R&B band with his brother and a friend.

In 2016 the percussionist Billy Martin from the band Medeski Martin & Wood made a performative collaboration with Sean Scully's monumental corten steel sculpture Boxes of Air at Scully's Tappan studio. It culminated in ‘Boxing for Sean’, a 6 movement percussion composition performed live outdoors.

In 2019 the duo Merzouga released a 46' sound-composition "The Language of Light - Music to the Work of Sean Scully" (YLE/DLF 2019) featuring the texts and the voice of Sean Scully. Its premiere broadcast was on Dec 3, 2019 at 9pm local time on Finnish broadcaster Yleisradio. German nationwide broadcaster Deutschlandfunk co-produced the piece, the German broadcast is scheduled for February 2020

Writing

Scully first began writing about art and his own work in the 1980s, although he only truly began to include writing as part of his practice from 1996 onwards. 2016 saw the publication of Inner: the collected writings and selected interviews of Sean Scully, by HatjeCantz

Personal life

Scully became a father at the age of 19, with the birth of his son Paul on May 7, 1965. Paul later died in a car accident in 1983 at the age of 18. While at Newcastle University, Scully met Rosemary Purnell, a fellow student in the Painting Department, they married in 1971 and later divorced. Scully married artist Catherine Lee in 1978, the two divorced in 1998. In 2006, he married artist Liliane Tomasko, his fourth wife. Their son Oisin Scully was born in 2009.

Public Collections

United States and South America

Europe

  • Abbot Hall Art Gallery – Kendal, England
  • Academy of Fine Arts, Munich – Munich, Germany
  • Albertina – Vienna, Austria
  • Arts Council of Great Britain – London, England
  • AXA Belgique – Brussels, Belgium
  • Banque Européenne d'Investissement – Luxembourg
  • BAWAG – Vienna, Austria
  • Bavarian State Painting Collections – Munich, Germany
  • Bibliothèque nationale de France – Paris, France
  • Birmingham Museum of Art – Birmingham, England
  • British Council – London, England
  • Centre national des arts plastiques – Paris, France
  • Ceolfrith Art Center – Sunderland, England
  • Château Lynch-Bages – Pauillac, France
  • Museo Chillida-Leku, – Hernani, Spain
  • Coleccion Conei, Barcelona, Spain
  • Consejería de cultura – Santander, Spain
  • Contemporary Arts Society – London, England
  • Council of National Academic Awards – London, England
  • Crawford Art Gallery – Cork, Ireland
    • East Coast Light I (1973)
  • Centre de la gravure et de l'image imprimee, La Louvière – Brussels, Belgium
  • Daimler Art Collection – Stuttgart, Germany
  • Deutsche Bank – London, UK
  • DZ Bank AG Kunst sammlung / KMMM – Frankfurt, Germany
  • Eastern Arts Association – Cambridge, England
  • Ecole d’Arts Plastiques – Châtellerault, France
  • Espace de l’Art Concret – Mouans-Sartoux, France
  • EMMA, ESPOO, Museum of Modern Art – Helsinki, Finland
  • Fitzwilliam Museum – Cambridge, England
  • La Fondation Edelman – Lausanne, Switzerland
  • Fondation Urvasco – Vittoria, Spain
  • Foundation Stiftelsen Focus – Borås, Sweden
  • CaixaForum Barcelona – Barcelona, Spain
  • Fundació Allorda-Derksen – Barcelona, Spain
  • Fundación Caixa Galicia - La Coruña, Spain
  • Gallery of Modern Art László Vass Collection – Veszprém, Hungary
  • Gertsev Collection – Moscow, Russia
  • Hôtel des Arts - Toulon, France
  • Hunterian Art Gallery – Glasgow, Scotland
  • Hugh Lane Gallery – Dublin, Ireland
    • Works in the Hugh Lane collection
  • Institut Valencià d'Art Modern (IVAM) – Valencia, Spain
  • Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) – Dublin, Ireland
  • Kunsthalle Bielefeld – Bielefeld, Germany
  • Kunstmuseum Lentos Linz – Linz, Austria
  • Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen – Düsseldorf, Germany
  • Kunsthaus Zürich – Zürich, Switzerland
  • Kunst und Museumsverein Wuppertal – Wuppertal, Germany
  • Laing Art Gallery – Newcastle, England
  • László Vass Collection – Veszprém, Hungary
  • Leicestershire Educational Authority – Leicester, England
  • Louisiana Museum of Modern Art – Humlebaek, Denmark
  • The Maramotti Collection – Reggio Emilia, Italy
  • Manchester Art Gallery – Manchester, England
  • Museum Folkwang – Essen, Germany
  • Musée d'Art Contemporain du Val-de-Marne – Vitry-sur-Seine, France
  • Musée d'art moderne (Saint-Étienne) – Saint-Étienne, France
  • Musee du Dessin et de l'Estampe Originale – Gravelines, France
  • Musée Jenisch – Vevey, Switzerland
  • Musee National d´Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou – Paris, France
  • Musee de Roland-Garros – Paris, France
  • Museo d'Arte Moderna di Bologna (MAMBO) – Bologna, Italy
  • Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía – Madrid, Spain
  • Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art – Barcelona, Spain
  • Mumok, Stiftung Ludwig – Vienna, Austria
  • Museum Pfalzgalerie – Kaiserslautern, Germany
  • National Museum Cardiff – Cardiff, Wales
  • Northern Arts Association – Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, England
  • Norwich Castle – Norwich, England
  • Open Museum, Environmental & Heritage Resource Centre, Leicestershire, England
  • Pier Arts Centre – Orkney, Scotland
  • Ruhr University Bochum – Bochum, Germany
  • Saastamoisen Saatio – Helsinki, Finland
  • Sala Rekalde – Bilbao, Spain
  • Sammlung Essl – Vienna, Austria
  • Sara Hilden Art Museum – Tampere, Finland
  • Staatsgalerie Stuttgart – Stuggart, Germany
  • Staatliche Museen Kassel, Neue Galerie – Kassel, Germany
  • Staatliche Graphische Sammlung München, Munich, Germany
  • Lenbachhaus – Munich, Germany
  • Tate Modern – London, England
    • Works in the Tate collection
  • The UBS Art Collection – Zürich/Basel, Switzerland
  • Ulster MuseumBelfast, Northern Ireland
  • Northumbria University – Newcastle, England
  • Victoria and Albert Museum – London, England
  • Von der Heydt Museum – Wuppertal, Germany
  • Whitworth Art Gallery – Manchester, England
  • Willy Michel Collection, Museum Franz Gertsch – Burgdorf, Switzerland
  • ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe (ZKM) – Karlsruhe, Germany
  • University of Limerick – Limmerick, Ireland

Australia

Japan

  • Bridgestone Museum of Art, Ishibashi Foundation – Tokyo
  • Nagoya City Art Museum – Nagoya
  • Tokyo International Forum – Tokyo

Quotes

  • “Art, especially abstraction: has to be a moral act. If not it’s likely to fall into bed with decoration.”
  • “Why stripes? Because they can be anything. And they can be anything because they are nothing. To make nothing into something is more interesting that making something into something else. The association with the devil notwithstanding”
  • “Artistic culture, to me, is like a huge rug that is constantly folded and unfolded by us. Every time it’s turned over, turned out, unfolded: it shows something new or something overlooked that now seems new.”
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