Jack B. Yeats
A bit about Yeats…… one of Ireland’s most successful 20th century painters
- Born in London, 1871
- Raised in Sligo by his grandparents
- His brother was the famous poet, William Butler Yeats
- His father was a famous portrait painter, John Butler Yeats, and his creative sisters were embroiderers called Lilly and Lolly
- Returned to London in 1888 to study art
- Met his wife (Mary Cottenham White) at art college
- Began his artistic career as an illustrator
- Provided artwork for popular periodicals of the day including the sports journals Ariel and Paddock Life
- Moved to Devon with his wife in 1897
- Started to establish himself as a fine artist
- Became increasingly interested in Ireland as a source of subject matter and travelled there frequently
- Captivated by the customs and traditions of rural Irish communities
- Travelled around Ireland making sketches of fairs, markets, sporting events and local characters
- Between 1900-1909 he filled over 100 sketchbooks, which he used to inform his paintings
- Moved to Wicklow in 1910
- His painting style changed dramatically when he started to use oil paints
- Abandoned line and flat, realistic colours for broad brushwork, thick impasto (the thick application of paint/visible brushstrokes) and an expressive use of colour
- Died in Dublin, 1957
Activity:
Compare and contrast his early work with his late work according to:
- subject matter (what the painting is about)
- composition (the layout)
- style (the visual appearance of the work)
- technique and materials (the way in which the work was constructed and the medium(s) used)
Examples of Yeats' work at various stages during his career:
Bachelor’s Walk, In Memory, 1915 (early career)
The Liffey Swim, 1923 (mid career)
Grief, 1951 (late career)
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