Barrie Cooke

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Barrie Cooke (born 1931) is an Irish abstract expressionist painter.

He was born in Cheshire, England, and spent part of his childhood in Bermuda and Jamaica before moving to the United States as a teenager where he later studied Art History at Harvard University. He has lived and worked in Ireland since 1954. He moved to Ireland in 1954 and had his first solo exhibition in Dublin the following year. Though he has been based in Ireland ever since, he is widely traveled and his richly expressionist, semi-abstract paintings have been strongly influenced by time spent in such far-flung places as Lapland, New Zealand, Borneo and Malaya. Nature in its infinite variety and irresistible flux is his chosen environment and subject matter. He has also, however, painted a number of nudes, as refracted through what Nobel laureate Seamus Heaney has referred to as his 'aqueous vision'. He has collaborated with a number of prominent poets including Heaney and the British Poet Laureate Ted Hughes, both of whom share his fascination with the elemental. Though primarily a painter he also produced a series of 'bone boxes' in perspex during the 1970s.

His painting often seem to express the soluble monumentality of the natural world, but he also made a series of perspex boxes containing real and artificial bones. He is a member of Aosdána, the Royal Hibernian Academy Gallagher Gallery in Dublin held a major retrospective of his work in 2003.

He has exhibited widely throughout Europe, the US and Canada. Major retrospectives include shows in the Douglas Hyde Gallery in 1986, the Haags Gemeentemuseum in 1992, and LAC, Perpignan, France in 1995. His work is represented in the collections of the Irish Museum of Modern Art, the Ulster Museum, the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, the Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, Holland and in many other public and private collections worldwide. In 2003 a major retrospective exhibition will take place at the Royal Hibernian Academy Gallery in Dublin. Barrie Cooke is represented by the Kerlin Gallery, Dublin.

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