REPRESENTED ARTISTS
Aengus Dewar
Chris Atkins
Andrew Hood
Francis Matthews
Francis O Toole
Raymond Hosty
Mark Cullen
Rocco Tullio
David Begley
Robert Ryan
Gerard McGourty
Philip.S.Childs
Stephen Cullen
Rick Bentham
Harry Thuillier Jnr
Radek Rola
 
ALSO EXHIBITING
Cathrine Barron
Jean Clyne
Cian Mc Loughlin
Bartek
Elaine Jones
Joby Hickey
Kyron Bourke
Daniel Femor Smith
Peter Pearson
John O Reilly
Maria Levinge
Susan Morley
Tony Mc Carthaigh
Jackie Mitchell
Jean McNaughton
 
SCULPTURE
Leo Higgins
Merce Canadell
Elizabeth Le Jeune
Fiona Smith Darragh
Gerard Cox
Kira Cambell
 
artist Links  
 
 
Francis Matthews
 
Oil Painting
 
 Beneath Clanbrassil Street
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Beneath Clanbrassil Street

Size : 40 x 50 cm

Price : -EUR

 Crampton court
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Crampton court

Size : 160x100cm

Price : contact galleryEUR

 The Core Removed
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The Core Removed

Size : 20 x 24 inches

Price : -EUR

 Long Lane
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Long Lane

Size : 60 x 45 cm

Price : -EUR

 Victoria Street
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Victoria Street

Size : 120 x 120 cm

Price : -EUR

 From Dublin to Cork
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From Dublin to Cork

Size : 20 x 32 inches

Price : -EUR

 Copper Alley
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Copper Alley

Size : 40 x 81 cm

Price : -EUR

 Off Aimens Street
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Off Aimens Street

Size : 50 x 60 cm

Price : -EUR

 Georges Lane
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Georges Lane

Size : 45x35cm

Price : contact galleryEUR

Purchase
 South King Street
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South King Street

Size : 100 x 120 cm

Price : -EUR

 
Francis Matthews

Francis Matthews has been exhibiting at Cherrylane Gallery early from 2005. His work gained immediate respect and quickly became popular among keen collectors.

He has recently exhibited at the RUA annual exhibition 2009 and recieved the James Adams Salesrooms Award. He won 'The ESB Keating Mc Loughlin Medal RHA 2007' and, runner up for 'The Hennessy Craig Scholarship RHA' 2007. In 2006 he received 'The John De Vere 1st Time Exhibitors Award RHA', and also the 'Naughton Award RHA 2006'.

Francis is a Dublin based artist. He graduated from architecture at UCD in 2004. However it was painting that really became his full time passion.

Through his technical abilities he softens and places beauty upon the strong architectural forms that are prevalent in his work. Corners, dark alleyways, historical institutions and the familiar streets of Dublin that we can simply dismiss while making way through our city lives, become hidden, fluorescent, peaceful and solemn places of thought. Almost always painting nocturnes this gives the painter the opportunity to execute his love for the play of multi sources of light. This can range from car, street lights, interior electric lighting, and a particular fondness for fluorescent and their action and reflections upon different surfaces. Although not many figures appear within the works of Francis Matthews a social aspect still strongly exist. Elements of road signs/markings, traffic lights, cars both abandoned and in motion, to public areas closed for the night show us life within the city but through closed doors. All this gives the onlooker a wholesome and private feeling for the environment.

Francis’s style is in close relation with American Realism of 1920s and 1930s headed by Edward Hopper (1882-1967). Similarities related are not only the artistic manner of cityscapes but going further to the foundational meanings of their works. However main distinction is the dissociation from loneliness and alienation feelings from Irish compositions, they are more neutral and at the same time open for interpretation.

Artist statement: ‘My images are informed by qualities of light and darkness, and the persuasion of depth. Seeing an exhibition of Gerhard Richter in New York a few years ago was inspiring and a little depressing because he had already accomplished effectively in painting some of the things I had aspired to. It was his work that started my interest in painting with the use of photography. Working from photographs helps me to enter degrees of focus into images and allows me to get closer to the (abstract) nature of light.’

 
Nighttown BY AIDAN DUNNE 2008

Francis Matthews is clearly, to borrow a phrase from Tom Waits, a Nighthawk at the Diner. His paintings draw us into a nocturnal world, exploring the deserted streets and byways while the city sleeps. Silence hangs in the air. Pools of electric light, pale yellow or eerily coloured neon, spread out and fade into the enveloping darkness, and they are endlessly reflected in myriad surfaces, in rainwater slicks and chrome, gloss painted doors and window panes, parked cars and the calm surface of the Grand Canal. Shadows are deep and impenetrable.
    Light reflected and distorted takes on a life of its own, reinventing the ordinary and setting us momentarily adrift, struggling to find our bearings. This nighttime world in all its strangeness and familiarity is fixed with calm precision in the paintings. They are photographic in their optical qualities, but they also have the unmistakable slowness, the deliberation of paint.
    The artist has written about a pivotal realization he experienced during a visit to an exhibition featuring paintings by Vermeer and his contemporaries at the National Gallery of Ireland. Although he was interested in the endless proliferation of detail in the work of several Dutch painters, he realized that, in this way of working, the law of diminishing returns kicked in. The more detail they included, and the more the viewer focused on the detail, the less room there was for the painting as such. You couldn’t see the wood for the trees.
    To Matthews’ surprise, this didn’t happen in Vermeer’s work. Although he has an unparalleled reputation for the limpid clarity of his paintings, when you look at the pictures themselves Vermeer seems curiously disdainful of detail. How did he achieve this paradoxical combination of vagueness and precision? It has long been recognized that he was familiar with and made use of optical instruments. Which instruments exactly and how he used them remain the source of some debate, but there is no question but that the paintings reproduce lens-based effects.
    As David Hockney notes in Secret Knowledge, his book on the Old Masters’ use of optical aids, Vermeer’s paintings feature lens-like foreshortening, differential focus, with areas and objects in soft focus or out of focus altogether, and halation – the halo effect in which out of focus highlights spread out into the surrounding space. In his brilliant book Vermeer’s Camera, Philip Steadman goes further and argues, very clearly and convincingly, that the artist used an elaborate camera obscura (a kind of filmless camera widely employed by artists) carefully set up in a studio space that features in most of his paintings. In a sense Vermeer painted as though he were a camera. He implies detail but on closer inspection that detail turns out to be an illusion.
    Matthews was struck by this, by the way fragments of Vermeer’s paintings become abstract patterns that only assume representational coherence in the context of the whole. Lawrence Gowing has written of Vermeer’s “vocabulary of light”, and there is a profound sense in which his paintings are made from the palpable fall of light on spaces and objects so that, as Matthews remarks of his own work, “brightness fleetingly becomes a solid thing.” More, captured through a lens, light emanating from a source and flowing through the labyrinth of the night-time city somehow defines what we cannot see. What would otherwise be nothingness is filled in with the mass and contours of buildings and objects. All of which is of course implied rather than depicted as such. But we recognise it because we know how to read it, just as we know how to read the picture of reality that Vermeer paints, even though it is in many ways an abstraction.
    To a striking degree, Matthews’ paintings are about what cannot be seen. Several commentators have suggested that this is true of a great deal of painting, and of the visual arts in general. In a way this flies in the face of common sense, given that so much visual art seems to show us how to see. Yet when Jacques Lacan says that the image in a painting is in a sense a decoy, a screen for what lies behind the painting; when the artist Frank Stella writes that the painter is always interested in something that is just out of sight, beyond the edge of the composition; when Michelangelo Antonioni the film director says that what is interesting about an image is always what lies behind it, or Victor Burgin says that paintings are fundamentally about what cannot be visualised, they strike a chord.
If we set aside our natural prejudices for a moment, we can see, so to speak, what they are getting at. We glimpse the notion of painting as an attempt to depict what cannot be depicted. Lest that sound perverse, it is a proposition entirely consistent with Samuel Beckett’s description of writing as an activity in extremis, pushing beyond the bounds of articulacy. Why say what can easily be said, Beckett implies. Equally, when he wrote about visual art, which he did for some time, he posed a comparable question. Why proceed along a well-tried representational road, marking out the world with the eyes of a building contractor?
So Matthews sets out to describe an invisible realm, or at any rate a night-time world that exists at the fringes of visibility, that calls upon our imagination, inviting us to fill in the gaps, make guesses, use our instincts to judge if this laneway is safe or whether danger might lurk around the corner, whether that shadow marks a solid wall or an empty space. If a doorway is illuminated when everything else is extinguished and asleep, as in Victoria Street, surely we can take that as a signal. Perhaps it’s our late-night destination, the refuge or recourse that tempts us to explore yet another hour beyond midnight.
Certain consistencies become apparent in the topography of the paintings. There are areas that are closed off to us, but also avenues of exploration, multiple points of entrance and exit that indicate a world beyond the pictorial space. One of the most striking is the ladder that rises from the Trinity Squash Court, ascending towards a pool of brightness above. A source of light often lurks around a corner or beyond the edges of the frame, inviting us to follow its lead. In Off Camden Street an alleyway recalls the configuration of Vermeer’s The Little Street, with wheeled bins as a contemporary counterpart to the chores in progress in the Vermeer. Beneath Clanbrassil Street, equally, echoes the celebrated View of Delft. That painting, and The Little Street are exceptional in that, as Steadman points out, Vermeer increasingly confined himself to the interior world of the studio.
It’s noticeable that Matthews does not include people in his paintings, even though he focuses on a densely populated urban environment, a slice of Dublin as precisely recreated and identified as Joyce’s is in Ulysses. In this he differs from an artist whose work forms an obvious point of reference, Edward Hopper. While Hopper often depicted empty urban and domestic scenes that, like Matthews’, seem to be haunted by the recent or hidden presence of people, he is best known for putting isolated, reflective figures in such settings, Nighthawks being a prime example. His feeling for architectural space, carefully observed, is extraordinary, and Matthews is clearly as ambitious in his attempts to describe not just the physical qualities of the city but its exact emotional flavour. This exhibition marks a significant step forward in terms of both his technical proficiency and the scope of his thematic concerns.
Aidan Dunne

 
Francis Matthews
 

1980                                 Born Dublin, Ireland

2004             Graduated in Architecture at University Collage Dublin



Solo Exhibitions:
 

2007 

'Halation' - Cherrylane Fine Arts

2008  

’46 South Richmond Street’, RIAI GALLERY, No.8 Merrion Square, Dublin 2.

2009

'TEN' New works by Francis Matthews, Shelbourne Hotel - Dublin
 

Group Exhibitions:                                             

2005

Cherrylane Fine Arts, Co.Wicklow  - Summer / Winter         

Cherrylane Fine Arts, Co.Wicklow - Art Fair, Dublin


The Blueleaf Gallery, Dublin - Charity Show in aid of AWARE, O.P.W.,Dublin

Oisin Gallery, Dublin - Christmas Show
                                                             
2006  

Cherrylane Fine Arts, Co.Wicklow - Summer / Winter                      

R.H.A, Dublin - Annual exhibition                      

John De Vere's, London-Irish youth foundation, London,U.K                      

R.H.A, Dublin  - Banquet exhibition                      

Cherrylane Fine Arts, Co.Wicklow - Art Fair Dublin                                                            

2007    

Cherrylane Fine Arts - Summer / Winter shows                      

R.H.A., Dublin -           Annual Exhibition

R.H.A., Dublin -            Banquet exhibition

Cherrylane Fine Arts -  Art Fair, Dublin

R.U.A, Belfast-Annual exhibition
 

2008              

R.H.A., Dublin - Annual exhibition

Cherrylane Fine Arts-Summer / Winter shows

Festival of the Masters     Orlando, Florida, U.S.A  

2009 

Cherrylane Fine Arts - Summer
Boyle Arts Festival

2010

RHA, Dublin- Annual exhibition

RA, London - Annual exhibition
             

Awards:                                                                 

2006          John De Vere, First time exhibitors award, RHA                                  Naughton Award RHA                                         

2007          ESB Keating and Mc Loughlin medal RHA                                            Hennessy Craig Award- runner up RHA

2007          James Adams Salesrooms Award, RHA


Residency’s
:

2007

Tyrone Guthrie Centre, Annaghmakerrig, Co.Monaghan, Ireland.

2008
  

Cill Rialaig, Art centre – Co. Kerry, Ireland.

2009

RHA, Artist in residence program - Dublin
 

Collections:    
                       

AXA Insurance

A 2 Architects
Bernard J Burke & Associates      
Broadcast Video
Prime Wealth Management Ltd    
Bert der Linden ( Dutch Embassy)

Gallery No.1
 

 
Francis Matthews
 
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Francis Matthews
Oil Painting
 
 All Sides
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All Sides

Size : 20 x 32 inches

Price : -EUR

 An Other
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An Other

Size : 18 x 14 inches

Price : -EUR

 Aungier St
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Aungier St

Size : 20 x 28 inches

Price : -EUR

 Ha Penny Bridge
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Ha Penny Bridge

Size : -

Price : -EUR

 Annes Lane
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Annes Lane

Size : 24 x 18 inches

Price : -EUR

 Bus Aras
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Bus Aras

Size : 16 x 32

Price : -EUR

 Corner of Gorges and Dame
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Corner of Gorges and Dame

Size : 24 x 18 inches

Price : -EUR

 Dawson Lane
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Dawson Lane

Size : 24 x 18 inches

Price : -EUR

 From Dublin to Cork
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From Dublin to Cork

Size : 20 x 32 inches

Price : -EUR

 Further Off
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Further Off

Size : 19 x 15 inches

Price : -EUR

 In Decision
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In Decision

Size : -

Price : -EUR

 Inhale
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Inhale

Size : 20 x 16 inches

Price : -EUR

 Off Poolbeg St.
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Off Poolbeg St.

Size : 20 x 30 inches

Price : -EUR

 Onwall
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Onwall

Size : 20 x 20 inches

Price : -EUR

 Ringsend from Fairview
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Ringsend from Fairview

Size : 16 x 20 inches

Price : -EUR

 The Core Removed
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The Core Removed

Size : 20 x 24 inches

Price : -EUR

 Too Much Internal Reflection
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Too Much Internal Reflection

Size : 20 x 24 inches

Price : -EUR

 Barge
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Barge

Size : -

Price : -EUR

 Cyclone
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Cyclone

Size : -

Price : -EUR

 Dark Adaption
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Dark Adaption

Size : -

Price : -EUR

 
Past Exhibitions
 
Oil Painting
 
 Arnott Street
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Arnott Street

 Off Aimen Street
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Off Aimen Street

 Copper Alley
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Copper Alley

 Long Lane
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Long Lane

 Beneath Clanbrassil Street
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Beneath Clanbrassil Street

 Dame Lane
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Dame Lane

 Off Longwood Avenue
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Off Longwood Avenue

 Victoria Street
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Victoria Street

 Grantham Place
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Grantham Place

 South King Street
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South King Street

 Pearse street station
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Pearse street station

 Grantham place
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Grantham place

 Off Meath Street
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Off Meath Street

 Crampton Court
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Crampton Court

Purchase
 Stairwell-69 Dame Street
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Stairwell-69 Dame Street

 Camden Row
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Camden Row

 Store room -School of architecture
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Store room -School of architecture

Purchase
 Palace Street
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Palace Street

 Screen 3 - Lighthouse Cinema
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Screen 3 - Lighthouse Cinema

 Bride Street
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Bride Street

 
 
 
Cherrylane Fine Arts, Killincarrig, Delgany, Co.Wicklow +353 1 2875565
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