Achill man paints the words of history

Achill man paints the words of history

Artist Gary McGinty with his 'Spoken State' works, showcasing messages of peace.

A movie art director from Mayo has unveiled a striking new series of paintings in which national flags have been created from some of the most iconic speeches in history.

Gary McGinty, who was nominated last year for a USA Art Directors Guild Award for his work on the Netflix hit series Wednesday, has painted the flags of Ireland, the UK, US, Canada, South Africa and India, using words drawn from groundbreaking addresses.

His ‘Spoken State’ pieces include the 1916 Proclamation, alongside speeches by John F Kennedy, Nelson Mandela, Gandhi and Martin Luther King’s ‘I Have a Dream’.

The artwork was unveiled at Art Evolve, a major contemporary fair which ran at Dublin’s RDS over the weekend.

Members of the Contemporary Art Gallery Association joined forces with other established galleries and individual artists to showcase the best of the Irish art scene.

“Over time, the meaning of historic speeches evolves,” said Achill Island native McGinty.

“Pádraig Pearse’s 1916 Proclamation, once a revolutionary declaration, is now seen as a founding text of modern Ireland.

“Gandhi’s ‘Do or Die’ began as a call for Indian independence but today symbolises non-violent resistance, while Volodymyr Zelensky’s ‘We are Here’ became an instant emblem of defiance.

“In times of crisis we can return to these words to see what they can still teach us.” 

McGinty trained as an architect and has divided his career between film art direction and painting. The 57-year-old began working in film in 1995, drawing the set of the GPO for the blockbuster drama Michael Collins, starring Liam Neeson and Julia Roberts.

He later worked as art director on Ridley Scott’s The Last Duel, starring Ben Affleck and Matt Damon, and Disney’s Disenchanted. His latest film project, Lee Cronin’s The Mummy, starring Jack Reynor, is due for release next month.

But away from film sets, McGinty, now based in Rathmines, devotes his time to paintings in his home studio.

“With this collection, I want people to reconnect with flags and start a new conversation about them,” he said.

“I’d love to see the paintings spark a broader discussion about speeches like the 1916 Proclamation — texts we see so often that we sometimes stop really reading them.” He said the inspiration for his artistic life began on Achill Island.

“My life changed when I was 10-years-old and a neighbour arrived with a set of watercolour paints and said, ‘I think you need these more than I do.’ I’ve been painting ever since.”

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