146
106 TONY O’MALLEY HRHA (1913-2003)The Pond (1994)
Oil on canvas, 152.5 x 91.5cm (60 x 36’’)
Signed with initials and dated (19)’94; signed again in Irish, inscribed with title and dated 1994 verso (AR2929)
Exhibited: ‘Tony O’Malley Exhibition’, The Taylor Galleries, Dublin, April/May 1996, Catalogue No.13.
Literature: ‘Tony O’ Malley’, edited by Brian Lynch, Scholar Press 1996, full page illustration page 291.
Even as a youth, Tony O’Malley loved water and rivers. He once described himself as “only the man who goes down to the
King’s River and make a drawing of the river there… that’s what I am…. I am only this.”
[1]
It’s not clear if he ever actually fished the river, but there is no doubting the importance that water and the plant and animal
life it supports were an essential ingredient in his work and in his sense of place. The King’s River flowed by the end of the gar-
den of his childhood home. Rivers or the back view of towns seen from the river bank or sea views permeate his work, when
he officially earned a living as a bank clerk in various towns around Ireland. He was a frequent visitor to Clare Island in Mayo,
his father’s native place, and when he emigrated in the 60s, it was to the coastal town of Saint Ives in Cornwall that he went.
After a long life, riddled with illness, and with his mobility greatly reduced, he came back to live in Callan, but not beside the
river. To compensate for this his wife Jane created two ponds in their garden. These ponds became the principal backdrop to
O’Malley’s visual musings on life, on movement, on stillness, on reflection, ultimately on beauty and harmony.
Ponds are not rivers however. Their very containment reflects the artist’s own situation. Unable to move around freely and
needing a golf buggy to take him from the house to the studio, and indeed from one pond to the other, he invests those small
areas of water with the dynamic energy and even the sweeping moods of the river. In this painting the heavy flow of current,
diminishing as it nears the edges of the pond may be partly a reference to the rivers of his younger days, but also to the
artist’s own life.
[1] Brian Lynch et al,
Tony O’Malley
, Dublin and Kilkenny, 1996 and later editions, p.44
Catherine Marshall , November 2016
€ 15,000 - 25,000




