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Patrick Swift (1927–1983) was an Irish painter who worked in Dublin, London and the
Algarve The Algarve (, , ) is the southernmost NUTS statistical regions of Portugal, NUTS II region of continental Portugal. It has an area of with 467,495 permanent inhabitants and incorporates 16 municipalities (concelho, ''concelhos'' or ''município ...
, Portugal.


Overview

In Dublin he formed part of the
Envoy Envoy or Envoys may refer to: Diplomacy * Diplomacy, in general * Envoy (title) * Special envoy, a type of Diplomatic rank#Special envoy, diplomatic rank Brands *Airspeed Envoy, a 1930s British light transport aircraft *Envoy (automobile), an au ...
arts review / McDaid's pub circle of artistic and literary figures. In London he moved into the
Soho SoHo, short for "South of Houston Street, Houston Street", is a neighborhood in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Since the 1970s, the neighborhood has been the location of many artists' lofts and art galleries, art installations such as The Wall ...
bohemia where, with the poet
David Wright David Allen Wright (born December 20, 1982) is an American former professional baseball third baseman who spent his entire 14-year Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the New York Mets. Chosen by the Mets in the 2001 Major League Baseball dr ...
, he founded and co-edited ''X'' magazine. In Portugal he continued painting while also writing and illustrating books on Portugal and founding Porches Pottery, which revived a dying industry. During his lifetime Swift had only two solo exhibitions. His first exhibition at the Waddington Gallery, Dublin, in 1952 was well acclaimed. For Swift, however, his art seems to have been a personal and private matter. In 1993 the
Irish Museum of Modern Art The Irish Museum of Modern Art (), also known as IMMA, is Ireland's leading national institution for the collection and presentation of modern and contemporary art. It is located in Kilmainham, Dublin. History Irish art collector Gordon Lam ...
held a retrospective of Swift's work.


Work

He was a figurative painter. ( Aidan Dunne: "He was a representational artist through and through...Fidelity to visual experience above all.") Though his style changed considerably over the years, his essential personality as an artist never did. He was plainly not interested in the formalist aspects of Modernism. He wanted art to have an expressive, emotive, even psychological content, though not in any literary sense. Anthony Cronin: "He was never in any doubt that painting was a re-creation of what the painter saw: in his own case at least not what the painter had seen or could imagine, but what he was actually looking at during the act of painting. A faithfulness of the sort was part of the bargain, part of his contract with his art…
hich Ij () is a village in Golabar Rural District of the Central District in Ijrud County, Zanjan province, Iran Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) and also known as Persia, is a country in West Asia. It borders Iraq ...
had nothing to do with description…What was at stake was a faithful recreation of the truth to the artist of the experience, in the painter's case the visual experience, the artist being admittedly only one witness, one accomplice during and after the fact. Of course this faithfulness did not rule out expressionist overtones. The truth was doubtless subjective as well as objective. Swift's blues and greys were usually properties of what he was painting. They were also part of his vision of things, properties of his mind. We felt then that time could only find its full expression through an art that was frugal, ascetic, puritanical even."Irish Museum of Modern Art, 1993, Catalogue. Essays on Swift by Anthony Cronin (poet) and Aidan Dunne (art critic ): He was never in any doubt that painting was a re-creation of what the painter saw: in his own case at least not what the painter had seen or could imagine, but what he was actually looking at during the act of painting. A faithfulness of the sort was part of the bargain, part of his contract with his art…
hich Ij () is a village in Golabar Rural District of the Central District in Ijrud County, Zanjan province, Iran Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) and also known as Persia, is a country in West Asia. It borders Iraq ...
had nothing to do with description…What was at stake was a faithful recreation of the truth to the artist of the experience, in the painter's case the visual experience, the artist being admittedly only one witness, one accomplice during and after the fact. Of course this faithfulness did not rule out expressionist overtones. The truth was doubtless subjective as well as objective. Swift's blues and greys were usually properties of what he was painting. They were also part of his vision of things, properties of his mind. We felt then that time could only find its full expression through an art that was frugal, ascetic, puritanical even...In faraway Paris, Samuel Beckett felt the same thing, writing the trilogy that was to give asceticism, frugality, puritanisim and the bitter humour that lies at the heart of the joke that is life, their full expression. Swift's avoidance of warm colours... was born in that time and afterwards harked back to it
Although he commented on art Swift never affiliated with any official or quasi-official art group or "style". He had three distinct "periods": Dublin, London, and Algarve. His work comprises
portrait A portrait is a painting, photograph, sculpture, or other artistic representation of a person, in which the face is always predominant. In arts, a portrait may be represented as half body and even full body. If the subject in full body better r ...
s, "tree portraits" (trees held a special fascination for Swift), rural
landscape A landscape is the visible features of an area of land, its landforms, and how they integrate with natural or human-made features, often considered in terms of their aesthetic appeal.''New Oxford American Dictionary''. A landscape includes th ...
s and urban landscapes. He worked in a variety of media including
oils An oil is any nonpolar chemical substance that is composed primarily of hydrocarbons and is hydrophobic (does not mix with water) and lipophilic (mixes with other oils). Oils are usually flammable and surface active. Most oils are unsaturat ...
,
watercolour Watercolor (American English) or watercolour ( Commonwealth English; see spelling differences), also ''aquarelle'' (; from Italian diminutive of Latin 'water'), is a painting method"Watercolor may be as old as art itself, going back to the ...
,
ink Ink is a gel, sol, or solution that contains at least one colorant, such as a dye or pigment, and is used to color a surface to produce an image, text, or design. Ink is used for drawing or writing with a pen, brush, reed pen, or quill. ...
, charcoal,
lithography Lithography () is a planographic method of printing originally based on the miscibility, immiscibility of oil and water. The printing is from a stone (lithographic limestone) or a metal plate with a smooth surface. It was invented in 1796 by ...
and
ceramics A ceramic is any of the various hard, brittle, heat-resistant, and corrosion-resistant materials made by shaping and then firing an inorganic, nonmetallic material, such as clay, at a high temperature. Common examples are earthenware, porce ...
. Swift regarded painting as "a deeply personal and private activity". (In 1952 ''The Irish Times'' noted that Swift's work was "intensely personal and strangely disturbing".)


Biography


Dublin

He was educated at
Synge Street CBS Synge Street CBS (colloquially Synger) is a boys' non-fee-paying state school, under the auspices of the Edmund Rice Schools Trust, located in the Dublin 8 area of Dublin, Ireland. The school was founded in 1864 by Canon ...
, a Christian Brothers School in Dublin. Although a self-taught artist he did attend night classes at the National College of Art in 1946 & 48 (under
Sean Keating Sean, also spelled Seán or Séan in Hiberno-English, is a male given name of Irish origin. It comes from the Irish versions of the Biblical Hebrew name ''Yohanan'' (), Seán (anglicized as '' Shaun/ Shawn/ Shon'') and Séan (Ulster variant; ang ...
), freelanced in London in the late 1940s and attended the Grande Chaumière in Paris, where he met Giacometti, in the summer of 1950. In the late 1940s he had a studio on Baggot Street, and from 1950 to 1952 he set up his studio on Hatch Street. Lucian Freud would share Swift's studio when he visited Dublin. He first exhibited professionally in group shows at the Irish Exhibition of Living Art in 1950 & 51 where his work was singled out by critics. The Dublin Magazine commented on Swift's "uncompromising clarity of vision which eschews the accidental or the obvious or the sentimental" and "shows his power to convey the full impact of the object, as though the spectator were experiencing it for the first time." In 1952 he held his first solo exhibition at the Waddington Galleries.
Time magazine ''Time'' (stylized in all caps as ''TIME'') is an American news magazine based in New York City. It was published weekly for nearly a century. Starting in March 2020, it transitioned to every other week. It was first published in New York Cit ...
: "Irish critics got a look at the work of a tousled young (25) man named Paddy Swift and tossed their caps in the air. Paddy's 30 canvases are as grey and gloomy as Dublin itself – harshly realistic paintings of dead birds and rabbits, frightened-looking girls and twisted potted plants. Their fascination is in the merciless, sharply etched details, as oppressive and inquiring as a back-room third degree. Dublin Understands. Wrote Critic Tony Gray in
the Irish Times ''The Irish Times'' is an Irish daily broadsheet newspaper and online digital publication. It was launched on 29 March 1859. The editor is Ruadhán Mac Cormaic. It is published every day except Sundays. ''The Irish Times'' is Ireland's leading n ...
: Swift 'unearths rom his subjectsnot a story, nor a decorative pattern, nor even a mood, but some sort of tension which is a property of their existence.' Said the Irish Press: 'An almost embarrassing candor... Here is a painter who seems to have gone back to the older tradition and to have given the most searching consideration to the composition of his painting.' Dublin, which likes authors who write with a shillelagh, understood an artist who painted with one. The Word Is Tension. By 1950, Paddy was in Paris... Nights, he went to the galleries, and there he found what he wanted to do. He liked such old French masters as the 17th century's Nicolas Poussin, the 19th century's Eugène Delacroix, such moderns as Switzerland's Alberto Giacometti and Britain's Francis Bacon. The much-admired decorative style of the Matisses is not for Paddy Swift. 'Art,' he thinks, 'is obviously capable of expressing something more closely related to life than these elegant designs.' His main idea is to suggest the tensions he finds in life. 'I believe when you bring, say, a plant into a room, everything in that room changes in relation to it. This tension – tension is the only word for it – can be painted.'" This may have been Swift's only interview. A motif of his work at this time was his bird imagery, which appear to have symbolic overtones, and may have even been a subtle form of self-portraiture. From early on he was involved with literary magazines, such as The Bell and ''Envoy'', contributing the occasional critical piece on art and artists he admired (e.g. Nano Reid, who painted Swift's portrait in 1950). He formed part of the group of artists and writers who were involved with
Envoy Envoy or Envoys may refer to: Diplomacy * Diplomacy, in general * Envoy (title) * Special envoy, a type of Diplomatic rank#Special envoy, diplomatic rank Brands *Airspeed Envoy, a 1930s British light transport aircraft *Envoy (automobile), an au ...
. Dublin portraits include
Patrick Kavanagh Patrick Kavanagh (21 October 1904 – 30 November 1967) was an Irish poet and novelist. His best-known works include the novel ''Tarry Flynn'', and the poems "On Raglan Road" and "The Great Hunger". He is known for his accounts of Irish life th ...
, Anthony Cronin, John Jordan, Patrick Pye, and Julia O'Faolain. During this period he also got to know the likes of
Samuel Beckett Samuel Barclay Beckett (; 13 April 1906 – 22 December 1989) was an Irish writer of novels, plays, short stories, and poems. Writing in both English and French, his literary and theatrical work features bleak, impersonal, and Tragicomedy, tra ...
(possibly one portrait) and Edward McGuire. Following the Waddington exhibition Swift moved to London in November 1952, using it as his base, with occasional trips to Dublin and stays in
France France, officially the French Republic, is a country located primarily in Western Europe. Overseas France, Its overseas regions and territories include French Guiana in South America, Saint Pierre and Miquelon in the Atlantic Ocean#North Atlan ...
,
Italy Italy, officially the Italian Republic, is a country in Southern Europe, Southern and Western Europe, Western Europe. It consists of Italian Peninsula, a peninsula that extends into the Mediterranean Sea, with the Alps on its northern land b ...
, Oakridge and the Digswell Arts Trust.


Italy, Oakridge & Digswell Arts Trust

In 1954 he was awarded a grant by the Irish Cultural Relations Committee to study art in Italy. He was accompanied by his future wife, Oonagh Ryan. Following his year in Italy Swift returned to Dublin, via Paris and London, for Christmas 1955, where Oonagh wanted to be for the birth of their first child. He then returned to London in 1956 and accepted Elizabeth Smart's offer to share Winstone Cottage (then owned by John Rothenstein), which contained a studio, in
Oakridge, Gloucestershire Oak Ridge or Oakridge may refer to numerous locations in English-speaking countries - the most well-known being Oak Ridge, Tennessee, due to its part in the Manhattan Project. These and other meanings include: Places Canada * Oakridge, Calgary, ...
. October 1958 – October 1959 he held a fellowship at the Digswell Arts Trust, for a period sharing a studio with Michael Andrews. During his residency at Digswell he painted many views of Ashwell and its Springs, one of which was presented by Henry Morris to Comberton Village College at its opening in 1959.


London

Swift was familiar with London and its literary and artistic circles by the early 1950s. In 1953 he shared a flat with Anthony Cronin in Camden but actually used it as his studio, staying instead with Oonagh in Hampstead – it was at this point that Swift and Wright first discussed the idea of creating a new literary magazine, a quarterly which would publish writing on artistic issues they felt to be of importance. 1957–58 he had a flat and studio in Eccleston Square. 1959–62 he lived in Westbourne Terrace ( Elizabeth Smart lived upstairs), and it was during this period that he founded ''X magazine'' In London his work grew more expressive.
Brian Fallon Brian Michael Fallon (born January 28, 1980) is an American musician, singer and songwriter. He is best known as the lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, and main lyricist of the rock band the Gaslight Anthem, with whom he has recorded six studio al ...
: "In London his style changed, not immediately, but gradually and very thoroughly. In fact, it was less a stylistic change than a transformation. From being a painter with sharp, angular lines and a thin paint surface, he became one who 'drew with the brush'. Modelled in heavy, laden strokes, and in general, daubed and dragged the paint around until it did his bidding. Stylistically, his 'first period' and 'second period' could hardly be more different from one another, though the underlying sensibility somehow remains." London portraits include the poets George Barker,
Patrick Kavanagh Patrick Kavanagh (21 October 1904 – 30 November 1967) was an Irish poet and novelist. His best-known works include the novel ''Tarry Flynn'', and the poems "On Raglan Road" and "The Great Hunger". He is known for his accounts of Irish life th ...
,
David Wright David Allen Wright (born December 20, 1982) is an American former professional baseball third baseman who spent his entire 14-year Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the New York Mets. Chosen by the Mets in the 2001 Major League Baseball dr ...
,
Brian Higgins Brian Michael Higgins (born October 6, 1959) is an American former politician who was the U.S. representative for , from 2005 until 2024. The district, numbered as the 27th district from 2005 to 2013 and as the 26th from 2013 to 2024, included ...
,
John Heath-Stubbs John Francis Alexander Heath-Stubbs (9 July 1918 – 26 December 2006) was an English poet and translator. He is known for verse influenced by classical myths, and for a long Arthurian poem, "Artorius" (1972). Biography and works Heath-Stubbs ...
, Paul Potts, C. H. Sisson, and
David Gascoyne David Gascoyne (10 October 1916 – 25 November 2001) was an English poet associated with the Surrealist movement, in particular the British Surrealist Group. Additionally, he translated work by French surrealist poets. Early life and surreal ...
. At the time Swift was sometimes referred to as the "poets' painter" – many of his close friends were poets and they seem to have regarded him as "their" painter. Apart from close family members, poets were almost exclusively subjects of his portraits. Regarding these London portraits Fallon says, "once again, his approach was basically humanist, not formalist... hese London portraitsare among the finest portraits painted in Britain at this period... Yet they were seen by only a handful of people, and in some cases were even lucky to have survived."Brian Fallon, "Patrick Swift and Irish Art" (1993), ''Patrick Swift: an Irish Painter in Portugal'', Gandon Editions, 2001 In 1962 Swift left London for an extended trip to southern Europe.


Algarve

Swift's travels led him to the small
fishing village A fishing village is a village, usually located near a fishing ground, with an economy based on catching fish and harvesting seafood. The continents and islands around the world have coastlines totalling around 356,000 kilometres (221,000  ...
of Carvoeiro in the Algarve. He was so enchanted with the place that he remained. In Algarve he painted, wrote and illustrated books on Portugal and founded Porches Pottery (Olaria Algarve). He designed the building that houses Porches Pottery, along with several other buildings. He exhibited: drawings for ''Algarve: a portrait and a guide'' at the
Diário de Notícias () is a Portuguese weekly newspaper published in Lisbon, Portugal. Established since 1864, the paper is considered a newspaper of record for Portugal. History and profile ''Diário de Notícias'' was first published in Lisbon on 29 December 1 ...
Gallery, Lisbon (1965); an exhibition of Porches Pottery at the Galeria Diário de Notícias, Lisbon (1970); an exhibition of his paintings at Galeria S Mamede, Lisbon (1974). He designed the sets for ''The Merry Wives of Windsor'' at the Portuguese National Theatre Company, Lisbon (1977). Swift lived and worked in the Algarve from 1962 until his premature death, from an inoperable brain tumour, in 1983. His work from this period includes portraits of his friend Francisco de Sá Carneiro (who commissioned Swift to paint his portrait when he was elected Prime Minister in 1980) and his partner, Snu Abecassis (Danish-born journalist and editor who founded the Portuguese publishing house, Publicações Dom Quixote). Swift is buried in the Igreja Matriz church in Porches, for which he designed the stations of the cross.


Criticism and ''X'' magazine

In Dublin and London he partook of artistic and, always, literary life, and from early on was involved with literary magazines. In London he founded and co-edited, with the poet
David Wright David Allen Wright (born December 20, 1982) is an American former professional baseball third baseman who spent his entire 14-year Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the New York Mets. Chosen by the Mets in the 2001 Major League Baseball dr ...
, ''X'' magazine, for which he contributed articles under the pseudonym "James Mahon" (Swift's mother was a Mahon from
County Wicklow County Wicklow ( ; ) is a Counties of Ireland, county in Republic of Ireland, Ireland. The last of the traditional 32 counties, having been formed as late as 1606 in Ireland, 1606, it is part of the Eastern and Midland Region and the Provinces ...
). Wright declared Swift to be "the true begetter and leading light of ''X''", noting that he "was of course responsible for the art side of the magazine ... nor was he any less active on the literary side of the magazine. Here Swift and I worked in perfect harmony." Aside from his involvement with ''X'' magazine, Swift was instrumental in several writers and poets having their work published, such as
Patrick Kavanagh Patrick Kavanagh (21 October 1904 – 30 November 1967) was an Irish poet and novelist. His best-known works include the novel ''Tarry Flynn'', and the poems "On Raglan Road" and "The Great Hunger". He is known for his accounts of Irish life th ...
,
John McGahern John McGahern (12 November 1934 – 30 March 2006) was an Irish writer and novelist. Known for the detailed dissection of Irish life found in works such as '' The Barracks'', '' The Dark'' and '' Amongst Women'', he was hailed by ''The Ob ...
(first published in ''X'' magazine), C. H. Sisson,
Brian Higgins Brian Michael Higgins (born October 6, 1959) is an American former politician who was the U.S. representative for , from 2005 until 2024. The district, numbered as the 27th district from 2005 to 2013 and as the 26th from 2013 to 2024, included ...
and
David Wright David Allen Wright (born December 20, 1982) is an American former professional baseball third baseman who spent his entire 14-year Major League Baseball (MLB) career with the New York Mets. Chosen by the Mets in the 2001 Major League Baseball dr ...
. David Wright regarding Swift promoting his own work: "Swift and Cronin... brought me to the attention of the publisher Derek Verschoyle – and this was typical of Swift, who would take immense pains to push the product of anybody whose work he believed in, yet never bothered to promote his own."
Brian Fallon Brian Michael Fallon (born January 28, 1980) is an American musician, singer and songwriter. He is best known as the lead vocalist, rhythm guitarist, and main lyricist of the rock band the Gaslight Anthem, with whom he has recorded six studio al ...
wrote:


Posthumous

In 1993 Gandon Editions published a biography of Swift to coincide with the IMMA Retrospective. The IMMA Retrospective was acclaimed by critics and artists alike. In 2002 the Department of Foreign Affairs (who also awarded Swift the grant to study in Italy) sponsored the "Patrick Swift: An Irish Artist in Portugal" exhibitions that were held at the Crawford Municipal Gallery, Cork, and Palacio Foz in Lisbon. In 2004 Swift's work appeared on the BBC Antiques Roadshow.Rotherham Roadshow, Sunday 3 October 2004
Image
The BBC art expert, Stephen Somerville, was highly praising of his work, saying simply of a London tree painting: "I love it". The father of the lady who brought Swift's work to the ARS seems to have been a sort of patron of Swift's.
In 2005 the Office of Public Works, Dublin, held an exhibition of paintings, drawings and watercolours by Swift. His portrait of Patrick Kavanagh forms part of the
CIÉ , or CIÉ, is a statutory corporation of Ireland, answerable to the Irish Government and responsible for most public transport within the Republic of Ireland and jointly with its Northern Ireland counterpart, the Northern Ireland Transport Hold ...
(Irish state transport authority) collection and recently toured as part of the "CIE: Art on the Move" exhibitions to much acclaim. Two pictures from IMMA's permanent collection, ''Forget-me- ots on a Cane Table'' & ''London Self-Portrait'', were exhibited in "The Moderns" exhibition (IMMA, October 2010 – February 2011).


Bibliography

* ''Patrick Swift 1927–83 – PS...of course'', Veronica O'Mara (ed.), Gandon Editions, Kinsale (1993). * ''An Anthology from X'', selected by David Wright, Oxford University Press (1988). * ''Patrick Swift 1927–83'', Irish Museum of Modern Art Retrospective Catalogue(1993); Anthony Cronin (poet) and Aidan Dunne (art critic). * ''An Irish Painter in Portugal'', Gandon Editions (2001); contributions by Fernando de Azvedo (painter and President of Sociedade de Bellas Artes, Lisbon), Peter Murray (Director Crawford Gallery, Cork) and Brian Fallon's "Patrick Swift and Irish art". * ''Dictionary of Irish Artists'', Theo Snoddy, Merlin Publishing, Dublin (2002), p. 640 * ''X, Volume 1'', Numbers 1–4, November 1959 – October 1960, Barrie & Rockliff (1961) * Patrick Swift and David Wright produced three books on Portugal, all illustrated by Swift: ''Algarve: a portrait and a guide'' (Barrie & Rockliff, London, 1965); ''Minho: a portrait and a guide'' (Barrie & Rockliff, London, 1968); ''Lisbon: a portrait and a guide'' (Barrie & Rockliff, London, 1971) Illustrated * (A guide to) ''Birds of Southern Portugal'', Randolph Cary, Barrie & Rockliff, London (1973) * ''Algarve: a portrait and a guide'' (1965); ''Minho: a portrait and a guide'' (1968); ''Lisbon: a portrait and a guide'' (1971) * ''Das harte Leben'', Heinrich Böll's German translation of
Flann O'Brien Brian O'Nolan (; 5 October 19111 April 1966), his pen name being Flann O'Brien, was an Civil Service of the Republic of Ireland, Irish civil service official, novelist, playwright and satirist, who is now considered a major figure in twentieth- ...
's ''
The Hard Life ''The Hard Life: An Exegesis of Squalor'' is a comic novel by Flann O'Brien (pen name of Brian O'Nolan). Published in 1961, it was O'Brien's fourth novel and the third to be published. (He wrote '' The Third Policeman'' in 1939, but it was publi ...
'', German edition (1966) * ''My Love to the Beaks and Tails'', Annie Sise, Readers Union (1976). * ''The Canterbury tales'', translated into modern English prose by David Wright (London, Harris, 1964); endpapers by Patrick Swift. * ''A Patrick Kavanagh Anthology'', Platt, Eugene Robert, Ed., Commedia Publishing Co., Dublin (1973); portrait of Kavanagh * ''Dead as Doornails'', Anthony Cronin, Dolmen Press, Dublin (1976); portrait of Anthony Cronin on the cover * ''Martello Spring 1984'', Maureen Charlton & John Stafford, Blackrock: Ardmore Records (1984); illustrated with 6 coloured plates by Irish artists incl. Walter Osborne, Patrick Swift & R.B. Beechey. Relating to * ''Patrick Kavanagh: A Biography'', Antoinette Quinn, Gill & Macmillan (2003) * ''The Chameleon Poet: A Life of George Barker'', Robert Fraser, Jonathan Cape (2001) * ''Young John McGahern: Becoming a Novelist'', Denis Sampson, Oxford University Press (2012). . * ''Love of the World'', John McGahern, Essays, Edited by Stanley van der Ziel, Faber and Faber (2009); "The Bird Swift". * ''Edward McGuire – RHA'', Brian Fallon, Irish Academic Press (1991) * ''Remembering How We Stood'', John Ryan, Gill and Macmillan, Dublin (1975) * ''Dead as Doornails'', Anthony Cronin, Dolmen Press, Dublin (1976); includes a portrait of Anthony Cronin by Swift on the cover * ''On the Look-out'', CH Sission, Carcanet Press, Manchester (1989). * ''The Collected Poems of Elizabeth Smart'', David Gascoyne (ed.) (Paladin, London, 1992) * ''By Heart – The Life of Elizabeth Smart'', Rosemary Sullivan (Flamingo, London, 1992) * ''Selected Poems, Homage to George Barker'' (On his Sixtieth Birthday), John Heath-Stubbs & Martin Green, -eds, Martin Brian & O'Keefe Ltd (1973); includes Swift's portrait of Barker and Swift's essay on Barker, "Prolegomenon to George Barker". * ''Selected Poems, David Wright'', Carcanet Press Ltd (1 July 1988); "Images for a Painter". * ''The Moderns'', IMMA, Irish artists and writers – the development of modern Ireland through its arts in the period from the 1900s to 1970s (2011) * ''Modern Art in Ireland'', Dorothy Walker, The Lilliput Press (1997) * ''Crystal Clear: The Selected Prose of John Jordan'', ed. by Hugh McFadden, Lilliput Press (2006). * "Lucian Freud: Prophet of Discomfort", Mic Moroney, ''Irish Arts Review'' (2007

* ''Night Thoughts: The Surreal Life of the Poet David Gascoyne'', Robert Fraser (OUP 2012) * Trespassers: A Memoir, Julia O'Faolain (Faber & Faber 2013) * P. N. Review, PN Review: Patrick Swift Obituary, PN Review 34, Volume 10 Number 2, November – December 198

Fourteen Letters (to David Wright), C.H. Sisson, PN Review 39, Volume 11 Number 1, July – August 198

* ''Selected Poems, John Jordan'', ed. Hugh McFadden, Dedalus Press, Dublin ( 2008); "Second Letter: To Patrick Swift" * ''Collected Poems, C.H. Sission'', Carcanet Press Ltd (1998); "For Patrick Swift" Selected articles * "Patrick Swift", John Ryan,
Envoy Envoy or Envoys may refer to: Diplomacy * Diplomacy, in general * Envoy (title) * Special envoy, a type of Diplomatic rank#Special envoy, diplomatic rank Brands *Airspeed Envoy, a 1930s British light transport aircraft *Envoy (automobile), an au ...
, vol 5/20 (July 1951) * "Young artist of promise", G.H.G, ''The Irish Times'', 3 October 1952 * 'AN IRISHMAN'S DIARY' – QUIDNUNC (Seamus Kelly), The Irish Times, 11 October 1952 * 'Art: Life with a Shillelagh', Time Magazine, 20 October 1952 * "The Fall and Rise of Patrick Swift", Brian Fallon, ''The Irish Times'', 11 June 1992 * "The lost hope of Irish art", Aidan Dunne, The ''Sunday Tribune'', 28 November 1993 * "The legacy of Patrick Swift", Brian Fallon, ''The Irish Times'', 2 December 1993 Catalogues * Paintings by Patrick Swift at the Victor Waddington, Victor Waddington Galleries, 8 South Anne Street, Dublin (1952); copy held at the National Library of Ireland. * Pinturas de Patrick Swift, Galeria S Mamede, Lisbon (1974) * ''Patrick Swift 1927–83'', Irish Museum of Modern Art Retrospective Catalogue (1993)


Solo exhibitions

* 2005 Paintings, drawings and watercolours by Patrick Swift, Office of Public Works Atrium, Dublin, Ireland * 2002 An Irish Painter in Portugal Retrospective, Crawford Municipal Art Gallery, Cork * 1994 Patrick Swift 1927–83, Ulster Museum, Belfast * 1993 Patrick Swift 1927–83, Irish Museum of Modern Art Retrospective, Dublin * 1974 Pinturas de Patrick Swift, Galeria S Mamede, Lisbon * 1965 Desenhos do Algarve,
Diário de Notícias () is a Portuguese weekly newspaper published in Lisbon, Portugal. Established since 1864, the paper is considered a newspaper of record for Portugal. History and profile ''Diário de Notícias'' was first published in Lisbon on 29 December 1 ...
Gallery, Lisbon; an exhibition of Swift's drawings for ''Algarve: a portrait and a guide'' * 1952 Paintings by Patrick Swift, Victor Waddington, Victor Waddington Galleries, Dublin


Group exhibitions

* New Portraits,
National Gallery of Ireland The National Gallery of Ireland () houses the national collection of Irish and European art. It is located in the centre of Dublin with one entrance on Merrion Square, beside Leinster House, and another on Clare Street, Dublin, Clare Street. It ...
(Dec 2013 – Feb 2014), Portrait of Anthony Cronin * The Moderns,
IMMA ''Imma'' is a large genus of moths in the obtectomeran "micromoth" family Immidae. This is the type genus of its family. They are widespread in the tropics, with most species occurring between the Himalayas and the Oceanian region; the genus i ...
, October 2010– February 2011; ''Forget-me- ots on a Cane Table'' & ''London Self-Portrait'' – from IMMA's permanent collection * Lunds Konsthall, Sweden, 1972; ''Study (with Holly)'', a painting from his first group exhibition, Irish Exhibition of Living Art, 1950; ''Study (with Holly)'' was also exhibited at the Cork Rosc, Irish Art 1943–73, 1980 * Portrait of Patrick Kavanagh (
CIÉ , or CIÉ, is a statutory corporation of Ireland, answerable to the Irish Government and responsible for most public transport within the Republic of Ireland and jointly with its Northern Ireland counterpart, the Northern Ireland Transport Hold ...
collection): RHA, 1968; 1971 ROSC exhibition, The Irish Imagination; in 2005 it toured as part of the "CIE: Art on the Move" exhibitions * Contemporary Arts Society Exhibition, Whitechapel Gallery, London, 1961; the Contemporary Arts Society bough
''The Garden''
(1959) and presented it to the
Warrington Museum & Art Gallery Warrington Museum & Art Gallery is on Bold Street in the Cultural Quarter of Warrington in a Grade II listed building that it shares with the town's Central Library. The Museum and the Library originally opened in 1848 as the first rate-su ...
* "Drawings, watercolours, gouache, ceramics", Victor Waddington, Victor Waddington Galleries, Dublin, 1954; five watercolours * Contemporary Irish Art,
National Library of Wales The National Library of Wales (, ) in Aberystwyth is the national legal deposit library of Wales and is one of the Welsh Government sponsored bodies. It is the biggest library in Wales, holding over 6.5 million books and periodicals, and the l ...
, Aberystwth, 1953 *
Leicester Galleries Leicester Galleries was an art gallery located in London from 1902 to 1977 that held exhibitions of modern British, French and international artists' works. Its name was acquired in 1984 by Peter Nahum, who operates "Peter Nahum at the Leiceste ...
, Jan 1952, ''Plants in a Potting Shed'' * Irish Exhibition of Living Art (1950, 51, 52, 54, 56)


Collections

*
National Gallery of Ireland The National Gallery of Ireland () houses the national collection of Irish and European art. It is located in the centre of Dublin with one entrance on Merrion Square, beside Leinster House, and another on Clare Street, Dublin, Clare Street. It ...

''Portrait of the Poet, Anthony Cronin''''Girl in a Garden''''Gnarled Olive Tree''Image
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IMMA ''Imma'' is a large genus of moths in the obtectomeran "micromoth" family Immidae. This is the type genus of its family. They are widespread in the tropics, with most species occurring between the Himalayas and the Oceanian region; the genus i ...
br>''Forget-me-Knots on a cane table''''Self-Portrait in the Studio''
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National Portrait Gallery (London) The National Portrait Gallery (NPG) is an art gallery in London that houses a collection of portraits of historically important and famous British people. When it opened in 1856, it was arguably the first national public gallery in the world th ...

''Patrick Kavanagh''
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Ulster Museum The Ulster Museum, located in the Botanic Gardens in Belfast, has around 8,000 square metres (90,000 sq. ft.) of public display space, featuring material from the collections of fine art and applied art, archaeology, ethnography, treasures ...
, National Museums Northern Ireland
''Positano Palm Tree''
* National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland,
University of Limerick University of Limerick (UL) () is a Public university, public research university institution in Limerick, Republic of Ireland, Ireland. Founded in 1972, as the National Institute for Higher Education, Limerick, it became a university in Septemb ...
: Self-Portrait, c. 1950, ink on pape
Image
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Warrington Museum & Art Gallery Warrington Museum & Art Gallery is on Bold Street in the Cultural Quarter of Warrington in a Grade II listed building that it shares with the town's Central Library. The Museum and the Library originally opened in 1848 as the first rate-su ...

''The Garden''
* Glebe Gallery, ''Trees at St. Columb's'', oi
Image
* Dublin Writers Museum, Portrait of Patrick Kavanagh * CIE Collection, Art on the move, Portrait of Patrick Kavanagh * The Kelly Collection (Kelly's Resort Hotel Rosslare), ''Trees in London'', oil on board; image in ''For the Love of Art'', The Kelly Collectio


Articles by Swift

* "David Wright", PN Review 14, Volume 6 Number 6, July – August 1980 * "Prolegomenon to George Barker", ''X'', vol. I, No. 3, June 1960; also published in John Heath-Stubbs and Martin Green (eds) ''Homage to George Barker'' on his 60th Birthday (Martin Brian & O'Keefe, London, 1973) * "The Bomberg Papers", edited by Swift, ''X'', vol.1, no.3, June 1960; ''An Anthology from X'' (Oxford University Press, 1988) * "The Painter in the Press" (under the pseudonym "James Mahon"), ''X A Quarterly Review'', vol. I, no.4, October 1960; ''An Anthology from X'' (OUP 1988
read article
* "Official Art & The Modern Painter" (under the pseudonym "James Mahon"), ''X Quarterly Review'', vol. I, no., November 1959 * "Mob Morals and the Art of loving Art" (under the pseudonym "James Mahon"), ''X A Quarterly Review'', vol. I, no.3, June 1960; ''An Anthology from X'' (OUP 1988) * "Some notes on Caravaggio", ''Nimbus'', Winter 195

* "By Way of Preface" (taken from "A Report to the Committee of Cultural Relations, Dept of External Affairs, on a Year spent in Italy in the study of Art & Painting, December 1955"), Gandon Editions Biography, 199

* "Painting – The RHA Exhibition", ''The Bell'', vol. 17, no. 13, June 1951 * "The Artist Speaks", ''Envoy – A Review of Literature and Art'', Vol. 4, no. 15, Feb 195

* "Nano Reid", ''Envoy – A Review of Literature and Art'', March 195


References

See 'Second Letter to P.S.', a poem by Swift's friend, the writer John Jordan; in Selected Poems, John Jordan, Dedalus Press


External links

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Shifting Ground, The Moderns, Irish Art 1950s, 08/10/2010
{{DEFAULTSORT:Swift, Patrick 1927 births 1983 deaths 20th-century Irish painters Irish male painters 20th-century British painters 20th-century Irish travel writers British male painters Irish modern painters Painters from Dublin (city) Irish illustrators Painters from London Irish male non-fiction writers Irish art critics People educated at Synge Street CBS Alumni of the Académie de la Grande Chaumière Alumni of the National College of Art and Design Irish expatriates in Portugal 20th-century Irish non-fiction writers 20th-century Irish male artists Writers from Dublin (city)