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Carrigaline Artist weaves her magic

An exhibition of images and landscapes of west cork opens next week in Rolfs Restaurant Café Art, Baltimore, next Monday (Sept 23), writes Michael Carr. The collection, titles "Magic in the Shadows", is the work of Carrigaline artist, Monica Jones. Jones has recreated many images and aspects of places such as Baltimore, Sherkin Island, Lough Hyne and the surrounding areas using medium of pencil and Indian ink.
"Using Rolf's Hostel as a base," says the artist, "I have worked on the collection from mid-Winter through to the beginning of autumn. The work coveys the richness and atmosphere of West Cork through the use of texture and shade.
"I have chosen the medium of pencil and Indian ink because it is a technique that comes very naturally to me," she continues, " and detail and images I've chosen to express the texture and constant changing of light through the seasons in West Cork."
On hand to open the exhibition will be renowned Irish artist Cormac Boydell. The Allihies based artist's work in ceramic and clay has been celebrated for some time now and can be found in places such as the National Museum and the national Self Portrait Museum.
'Magic In The Shadows' runs in the Café Art until November 3.


Richness and Texture of the changing Seasons captured


A NEW collection of work by Monica Jones, entitled Magic In The Shadows, will be launched by Cormac Boydell at Roffs Restaurant Café Art, Baltimore on Monday 23 September.
The exhibition, which runs until November 3, is in the medium of pencil and Indian ink has being worked on from mid-winter to the beginning of autumn. Monica conveys the richness of atmosphere that is West Cork through the use of texture and shade. The collection includes many aspects of Baltimore, Sherkin Lough Hyne and the surrounding areas.

Some of Monica's previously commissioned works hang in Golden Vale, Charleville and in Schering Plough, Innishannon. Cormac Boydell is one of Ireland's foremost artists working in ceramics. He is based in Allihies and his work can be found in the National Museum, the Ulster Museum and the National Self Portrait collection.
Details: 021 4374460



Wishing you were here in Baltimore?

The pretty harbour village of Baltimore has being something of a haven for Carrigaline folk. Drop into Bushes bar any weekend and you’re sure to find a familiar Carrigaline face or two!
So, it shouldn't really come as much of a surprise that Carrigaline based artist Monica Jones is currently holding an exhibition of her art work in the beautiful surroundings of Rolfs Restaurant & Café Bar, part of the famous Rolf's Hostel in Baltimore.

Step inside and you will find images of Rolf's gardens and stone buildings, Sherkin Island, Baltimore Cove, Lough Hyne and the Carrigaline-Crosshaven walkway hanging side-by-side. The theme of the 28 works on display focuses on the play of light as we move from season to season. From beautiful crisp bright winter mornings on the Carrigaline-Crosshaven walkway to the subtle transition from summer to autumn on Sherkin Island, the artist, the artist manages to capture the essence of light and shade in her paintings.

"98% of my work is completed outdoors 'on the spot'. I like to point from first hand in an energetic manner as I try to capture the ever changing sense of light and shade on a scene," explained Monica Jones.

"I’ve spotted a fair amount of Carrigaline faces down here in Baltimore over the summer while painting," Monica joked. But jokes aside, out of five Carrigaline-Crosshaven art works on show in Baltimore, three have already being sold.

So, if you happen to be down Baltimore way over the Bank holiday weekend, why not pop into Rolf's Café Art and feast your eyes on the contrasting beauty of Carrigaline and West Cork. The exhibition runs until 3rd November 2002.




Carrigaline Artist weaves her magic

FISH GUTS ON THE KITCHEN SINK WERE MONICA JONES UNUSUAL, AND RATHER SMELLY ROUTE TO GETTING HER DEGREE IN ART. By Lynda Cookson
Her father was employer in the dockyard in Cobh, and the family were heavily involved in leisure fishing. This meant a rather abundant amount of fish being gutted in the Jones household, almost daily. In the company of a few jars of formaldehyde preserving her subject, Monica would trot off to classes each day, spill her guts, and paint. She got her degree.

I asked her who and what had influenced her work. She said: "Growing up in Cobh was very inspiring, and my first influences came from my parents who are both very creative. While in Art College, I came across the work of artist Ann Madden and was influenced by her use of paint and graphite. Tony O'Malley was always a favourite of mine for his use of colour and composition. Likewise, the ceramic artist Cormac Boydell, for his use of texture and glazes. In recent times I've being influenced and inspired by the music and lyrics of Ger Wolfe and John Spillane, in particular the song 'The Dance of the Cherry Trees.' The lyrics conjure up so many childhood memories!"

Although she qualified using oil paint as her main medium, she found herself with insufficient time and space to pursue oils, and began to explore using watercolour and pencil as more practical materials to suit her lifestyle. Over the next few years, when she settled in West Cork, Monica took pencil and ink techniques as far as she possibly could, producing fine sketches of structures, stones and horticultural details. During this time, and while she was teaching art in schools, she was working on commissions, in particular recording the restoration work of Rathbarry Castle in her delicate sketches. The restoration of Kilkoe Castle and then Castle Freak followed, over a number of years.

GIVING
Skimming past Monica's years of teaching in schools would be a mistake. She put a lot of work giving the children a wider perspective of art, giving them a chance to see their work in a public context. She completed workshops with the children, putting their ideas into three categories of The Magic Kingdom, The Magic Fruit Garden and The Valley of Magic and Wizardry. She enlarged their drawings into a college, and with the help of the school caretaker, the playground was prepared, paint and paintbrushes were purchased, and the groups of children set to mixing their colours spontaneously while painting their mural. This motivating and challenging experience taught the children about contrast, colour, tones and shades, as well as how to use acrylic paint and a number of techniques in brush stroke and blending. It is most unlikely that any of those children will ever forget those precious hours spent producing their first public artwork.

UNIQUE
About six years ago, Monica felt she needed a career break, so she took time off from teaching in schools to give her self more time to paint and to teach privately. She rediscovered landscapes and, a few extremely successful exhibitions later, has never looked back! During this time, she worked primarily on location to capture mood and spontaneity, using pencil and Indian ink as the ideal form to grasp texture and the ever-changing light, which is unique to West Cork.
As you can imagine, working on location can be an interesting experience for an artist! Monica went from the isolated and slightly scary forest of Castle Freak, where she felt strange and nervous, to fishing ports and harbours, where she has been showered with warmth and friendliness, with people stopping by to suggest new places where she should sketch. In the old port of Barlogue, just outside Baltimore, early one morning, an elderly fisherman was thrilled to find her sketching his eighty year old fishing boat, which had see faithful service for all those years. She was equally thrilled to have been able to give such pleasure to a seasoned old fisherman, whose pleasure and pride was so evident.

Monica tells of a similar meeting with sailors at a different level: "About two years ago, as I was preparing for my exhibition 'Magic of the Shadows,' I was on location again in Barlogue doing a detailed study of a fascinating old fishing punt. I believe it was an old mackerel boat, very similar in style to a currach. While I was drawing, a gleaming yacht came across my line and moored in front of the fishing punt. The elderly couple aboard came ashore in an inflatable dingy. The yacht's captain, noticing that I was drawing, approached me to tell me that I 'had his permission' to draw his yacht. I was too speechless to tell him that his yacht was the last thing I wanted to draw at that time and I was far more interested in the one hundred year old fishing punt that his yacht was now dwarfing and casting a shadow over!"

Talking about techniques and processes in art, it emerged that she was not aware that she had a process until it was pointed out to her by several people during last year. It involves a lot of sketching and drawing, note-taking, and pushing herself creatively to a point of frustration, finally emerging on the other side with a finished piece of art work. The content of her work dictates the technique, for example one of her most recent paintings entitled The Waters Edge need strong use of colour, so oils became the preferred technique.

CONNECTION
For Monica, the ideal way for her to be artist is to live in a location like West Cork, within a small community surrounded by breathtaking scenery, to have a connection with other artists, and have time to absorb, to daydream and just to breathe. To help her balance family life and her career as an artist, she enrolled in a time management workshop, which went a long way towards identifying her needs as an artist and balancing her needs with her responsibilities as a mother.

Finally, I asked Monica what she would like people to feel when they look at her work. She replied: "I would like to think that people can connect with my work through compositions I choose, be it evoking long forgotten memories or by helping people realise that can be a sense of magic in the most obscure corner or nook or cranny."


  Monica Jones
  the estuary, church road, carrigaline, co. cork, ireland.
  +353 (0)87 953 5574
  monica@monicajonesart.ie