Joseph Malachy Kavanagh (1856 - 1918)
Joseph Malachy Kavanagh
Joseph Malachy Kavanagh was an Irish painter. He is known for his painting landscapes, seascapes, rural scenes in Ireland, France and Belgium and occasional portraits. He particularly was inspired by the landscape in and around Dublin. Kavanagh first exhibited at the Royal Hibernian Academy from 1875. In September 1881 he won the Albert Scholarship. On a trip to Brittany in 1883, he met up with a host of other young artists all of whom were influenced by the plein air naturalism of Jules Bastien-Lepage. In 1890, he published in Dublin a series of prints from etchings he created of landscape scenes from Mont St. Michel, Bruges and of "A Metallurgist" which were acquired by the British Museum in 1902. During the 1890s, he resided in Clontarf and painted numerous views around Howth and its environs, many aspects of Dublin Bay and his famous views on the sands of Portrane, Sutton, Portmarnock, Merrion and the North Bull. Another related group entails views taken along Dublin’s riverbanks.
Date and place of birt: | 1856, Dublin, Ireland |
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Date and place of death: | 2 april 1918, Dublin, Ireland |
Nationality: | Ireland |
Period of activity: | XIX, XX century |
Specialization: | Animalist, Artist, Engraver, Genre painter, Landscape painter, Painter |
Genre: | Animalistic, Cityscape, Genre art, Landscape painting, Marine art, Portrait, Rural landscape |
Art style: | Realism, Naturalism |