The Island: Paul Ryan
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Ryan has for decades navigated the landscape, drawing inhabitants from history and placing, or misplacing, them in his landscape. Politically charged with a wicked wit, his imaging of the sartorial elegant colonial interlopers—sardonically rendered in oil—has become a mainstay of contemporary Australian visual culture.
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Ralph Hobbs
October, 2022
“Colonial art is the knack of rendering the new as old, the unknown as the known, the antipodean as European, the contemptible as the respectable.”1.
The European artists that sailed to the South Pacific in the 18th and 19th centuries were part of a migratory force that would change everything in the southern climes. They painted the original inhabitants, flora and fauna in a manner and methodology that befitted their overriding colonial societal and artistic ambitions. Science, literature, and painting morphed, creating an enlightened yet imperialist view of the new world. Exploring and recording, they would delve into the contemporary pictorial genres from the picturesque to the sublime. This was the landscape painting tradition, born from the idealised canvases of Claude Lorrain. Their painted record would provide a visual narrative that surreptitiously supported the expansion of Empire for the two centuries to come.
Throughout history, visual propaganda in its various guises is a curious phenomenon. From religious frescos of the Renaissance to contemporary fake news, those in power have used the image to underscore power and direct public opinion. The primary objective is to ultimately skew reality—with the alternative reality portrayed, becoming a controlling force.
Artist Paul Ryan lives and works north of Wollongong in Dharawal county. It is a dramatic place—the great Illawarra escarpment crashes into the breaking swells of the Pacific Ocean. The ever-changing light and weather patterns are apparent and integral to all who live there. It is the constant in Ryan’s oeuvre—from the tonality of his palette to the visual power of the swaths of oil that echo the power of the sea. Ryan has for decades navigated the landscape, drawing inhabitants from history and placing, or misplacing, them in his landscape. Politically charged with a wicked wit, his imaging of the sartorial elegant colonial interlopers—sardonically rendered in oil—has become a mainstay of contemporary Australian visual culture. There is, at times, a punk sensibility to this most serious of artists.
When considering the awkwardness of imaging colonial habitation, one is reminded of Benjamin Duterrau’s The Conciliation, 1840—arguably Australia’s first history painting. Almost comical in its naïve methodology, the benignly intended narrative of Christian good intention gives way to the reality of the traitorous decimation of the first Tasmanians from the wrong end of a musket.
The echoes of the past poignantly ricochet through The Island. Ryan’s nod to Francisco Goya becomes a rich vein for the artist, and is married with a newfound fascination for the Tasmanian gothic. The relevance of the stories of the southern island subliminally manifests in the naval blue tunics of Ryan’s protagonists as they stand prone and entrenched in a new land that is being manicured and imaged in the mind’s eye of the colonising explorer naturalist.
1. Flanagan, Richard. Gould’s Book of Fish; A Novel in Twelve Fish. p.78
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Works
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Paul RyanBecalmed , 2022Oil on Linen92 x 82cmSold -
Paul RyanColonial in Golden Light , 2022Oil on Linen92 x 82cmSold -
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Paul RyanColedale Winter Light , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
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Paul RyanDwarf and Parrot , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
Paul RyanEscape the Island , 2022Oil on Linen81 x 92cmSold -
Paul RyanFire is the Illuminator , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
Paul RyanGold Lion , 2022Oil on Linen122 x 112cmSold -
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Paul RyanHarlequins and Colonial, 2022Oil on Linen138 x 122 cmSold -
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Paul RyanLast day on the Island , 2022Oil on Linen92x 41cmSold -
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Paul RyanLost, Pissed and Dancing , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
Paul RyanMid Winter Coledale , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
Paul RyanPalm Coast Rosella , 2022Oil on Linen102 x 92cmSold -
Paul RyanPalm Coast Rosella, Thirroul , 2022Oil on Linen102 x 92cmSold -
Paul RyanPalm Coast Rosella, Wombarra , 2022Oil on Linen102 x 92cmSold -
Paul RyanRed and Green Rosella Little Austi , 2022Oil on Linen122 x 138cmSold -
Paul RyanRosella and Rain , 2022Oil on Linen122 x 112cmSold -
Paul RyanRosella and Storm , 2022Oil on Linen138 x 122cmSold -
Paul RyanRosella Red and Green , 2022Oil on Linen102 x 92cmSold -
Paul RyanStrider , 2022Oil on Linen138 x 122cmSold -
Paul RyanStudy for the Island , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
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Paul RyanThe Golden , 2022Oil on Linen122 x 112cmSold -
Paul RyanTake me to the river , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Golden Study , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51cmSold -
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Paul RyanThe Golden Hour , 2022Oil on Linen122 x 112cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Golden Hour, Study , 2022Oil on Linen92 x 82cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Golden with Colonial , 2022Oil on Linen138 x 122cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Hunt , 2022Oil on Linen138 x 138cmSold -
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Paul RyanThe Island The Hunt , 2022Oil on Linen138 x 122cmSold -
Paul RyanThe New Land , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 61cmSold -
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Paul RyanThe New Land , 2022Oil on Linen61 x 61cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Palm Coast Looking North , 2022Oil on Linen130 x 180cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Palm Coast Looking South , 2022Oil on Linen130 x 180cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Point at which the idea of remaining at 90 Degrees no longer seems and option, 2022Oil on Linen84 x 72cmSold -
Paul RyanThe Skull cracker, after Goya , 2022Oil on Linen84 x 72cmSold -
Paul RyanUnmoored , 2022Oil on Linen102 x 92cmSold -
Paul RyanWe Saw an Irregular Shimmer Moving Through that Plain , 2022Oil on Linen122 x 112cmSold -
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Paul RyanWinter Colonial study, 2022Oil on Linen61 x 51 cmSold
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