Pigsy

That's a wrap! PIGSY Exhibition in La Casa Amarilla, Malaga by PIGSY

PIGSY Exhibition in La Casa Amarilla

Dog Art - when dogs visit dog friendly art galleries

PIGSY’s Spanish Art Exhibition is “cerrado”

What a roller-coaster ride it’s been over the past few weeks since my exhibition opened in La Casa Amarilla on 27th of March. From the opening day until closing on Tuesday 20th of April it has been Go Go Go! The high of the incredible opening day just kept going and I was busy all month with callers to the exhibition and giving tours and talks to visitors and groups. If I was in the gallery when visitors called in I had a great time chatting with them and answering their questions. And if I wasn’t in the gallery it was fantastic to see reactions of visitors on social media as most tagged the PIGSY instagram and twitter. - as pictured, there were even some visitors of the four legged variety!

Art sponsored by San Miguel

My exhibitions in the past in Ireland have been sponsored by beer makers. O’Brother Brewing sponsored my first show in The Kemp Gallery while Hope Beer sponsored my exhibition in Fumbally Exchange. It was apt then to again be sponsored by a beer company for my latest art exhibition. But what a beer company!

“I Went to Mass” in La Casa Amarilla was sponsored by none other than the famous Spanish Cerveza “San Miguel”. As I raised a San Miguel beer at the art exhibition, I gave both the Irish toast of “Sláinte” and Spanish “Salud”. Both of these toasts mean Health….but I think they brought me good luck too!

Sold! Yellow is the new red dot!

Contact La Casa Amarilla Gallery to start your art collection today and get art up on your walls

The translation of “La Casa Amarilla” is “The Yellow House”. So of course it makes sense for the gallery to use yellow dots in place of the traditional red dot when art sells. It was a great moment to see Gallery Director David Burbano place the first yellow dot on to a sold PIGSY art work. The first sale is always exciting and having seen lots of red dots in the past, I enjoyed seeing the unique La Casa Amarilla yellow dot go up on the wall.

The art work in the photograph with David placing the yellow dot on it is a framed paper study. You can read more about the process of creating this artwork at the bottom of this blog. It has been framed by a local craftsman in a way that I specified in order to highlight the art and to show it to it’s best potential. They are a very accessible piece and can be easily shipped any where in the world. One of these art works was recently posted in the mail to County Cork in Ireland and the new collector was delighted to receive it promptly and get it up on the wall of their home.

It excites me to think that there will now be a number of PIGSY art works gracing the walls of homes in Spain and I know one piece is destined for Marbella to be included in a collector’s contemporary art collection. As an Irish artist it is always awesome when you see your art travelling beyond the shores of Ireland - in recent times one of my pieces was shipped to a home in Canada and knowing that they are now hanging on walls in Spain is a great thing too! See below for some of the artworks that have now sold as part of the Malaga exhibition “I Went to Mass” and also some photos of visitors to the exhibition.

An Altar of Art

The altar of art - the religion of art

I created a large feature wall of art studies, as part of the exhibition, of which the concept is that it becomes an “Altar of Art”. These studies are now available for sale and you can choose your favorite one which I will then frame in a bespoke custom frame specified by me. As a fun alternative, you can ask me to select one for you and I will then frame it without showing you which one I have chosen for you. The framed piece of artwork will then be posted to you and will make for a surprise when you open it as it is at this point that you will see which art work you are now the proud owner of!

See below for the “Altar of Art” of which you can choose a study to be framed and mailed to you…..or I can mail to someone else of your choosing if you know an art lover who would enjoy receiving it as a special gift from you.

Browse my website under works for further information about this unique range of artworks and what the finished concept looks like. They will make a nice addition to any home and are great for anyone starting their contemporary art collection.

Art studies available as affordable framed art for your walls and home
Art gallery uses yellow dot instead of the traditional red dot when it sells art in Spain - how unique

“I Went to Mass” artworks

Contact David Burbano in La Casa Amarilla for further information, availability and pricing, etc..

Custom PIGSY Nikes by PIGSY

Air Jordan Flights custom painted by PIGSY

Commissioned pieces of art sure can be interesting!

I feel very lucky to have received some interesting commissions in my art career - one being the recent painted dinosaur head which I blogged about recently.

However, my latest commission is probably of the most interest to me - a customized pair of Nike trainers for a young break dancer. Very cool!

White Air Jordan Flights

Here’s the before pic of the Air Jordan Flights before they were custom painted.

Angelus Leather Paint

As a starting point, I needed to order Angelus Leather paint to customize the Nike shoes. I looked on Amazon initially but then I founded a company in Madrid who sold Angelus leather paint online. The paint arrived promptly considering I made the order over the Easter holiday.

Custom painted Nikes

And most importantly, what you’ve been waiting for, the finished custom Nikes by PIGSY!

The artwork is very connected to the client who commissioned custom paint job on these Nike trainers. Do you read binary code?! You may be able to figure out some of the messages!

However, the painted star is fairly easy to read on the front of the runners - it symbolises the stardom of the owner of the Air Jordans!

Personalized Nike Trainers by PIGSY

"I Went to Mass" - PIGSY Solo Exhibition in La Casa Amarilla, Spain by PIGSY

LCA - Centro de arte y cuktura contemoranea en Malaga oatrocinado oir San Migue Cerveza - La Ca Casa Amarilla is Malaga’s premerie venue for contemporary art and culture

“I Went to Mass” by PIGSY

PIGSY Solo Art Exhibition

La Casa Amarilla Galerie, Calle Santos, Malaga

Date: 27 March until 20 April

Sponsored by San Miguel Beer

PIGSY Spanish Art Exhibition Opening

Photos below are of the opening of the PIGSY solo art show “I Went to Mass” in La Casa Amarilla Gallery on Santos Street in Malaga, Spain, on Saturday 27th of March. The exhibition is running until an extended date of April 20th.

For opening hours and contact details for the LCA gallery, see here.

For more great pics, see here on Facebook

A focus on 3 works by PIGSY by PIGSY

“Non-Serviam”

Hyper gestural original art, originally exhibited by PIGSY in London at The Other Art Fair

Size: 1500mm W x 1500mm H Mixed Media on Canvas

This piece deals with the contradiction between the refusal to adhere to society’s rules and the loneliness and helplessness that are a result of this refusal. “Non-Serviam” (I Will Not Serve) is a bold statement of non-compliance and self sufficiency but looking deeper into the piece there is a call for help and the need for a guardian angel to save the artist. With the knowledge that almost every main character in Pigsy’s art is a self-portrait, there is the suggestion that the guardian angel required is his art and there exists a hope of self-salvation through it. Another clear indicator of the confusion caused by this paradox is the use of the word Malaika (an Islamic word for angel) on the angel’s chest, spelled wrong as Malaka (a Greek term for wanker).

“Mo Laoch” (My Hero)

Size: 1500mm W x 1500mm H Mixed Media on Canvas

PIGYS paints the character James Joyce as the central character in “Mo Laoch” (My Hero as gaeilge) which was originally exhibited in London at The Other Art Fair

It is a rarity that a character in a Pigsy piece is not a version of the artist himself but in this piece the figure is that of famous Irish writer James Joyce. The inspiration for this painting came after watching a documentary on Joyce and the realised connection between him and the artist's uncle, also James, whom he never met but who's house he now owns. Was Joyce talking about people like James in his celebrated novel Dubliners.

Could he have been a role model and mentor for Pigsy for he was also a poet and artist. The title "Mo Laoch" is Irish for "My Hero", a reference to the actual feeling for Joyce and the potentially stronger feeling for his uncle that, alas, never existed. Note that Joyce holds the red spelling book, Pigsy's nemesis, an item depicted in many of his works to signify his struggle with dyslexia.

“Cyberpunks”

Cyberpunks-1972-Binary-Pigsy(1).JPG

Size: 1500mm W x 1500mm H Mixed Media on Canvas

“Cyberpunks” is Pigsy’s take on the movement formed in 1990, the beginning of the deep web and a decentralising power of the banks. The crossed out 72 is both a cry for admittance and a confusion that the artist’s year of birth predates the aforementioned formation- “I was a cyberpunk before it even started, let me in”. Note the signature in the painting in the top right is Pigsy in binary.

About PIGSY by PIGSY

About expressionist Irish artist PIGSY

Irish Artist PIGSY

Born on the North Side of Dublin in Ireland, Ciarán McCoy is an Irish Artist and award winning architect (ODKM Architects). He borrows from his architectural knowledge to create his diverse expressionist art work as his alter ego “PIGSY”.

An artist wearing a black t-shirt with a yellow logo that says “Life ain’t always empty” standing in their studio in front of art they have created along with paint cans on the ground

The mediums that Pigsy uses range vastly from everyday household acrylic paint, chalk, oil sticks,  acrylic sticks, oil paint, spray paint, charcoal  and any other medium that feels right at the time of painting. McCoy explains “I like the looseness of my paintings I don't really want to put boundaries on myself or to be neat and proper. That's my architectural life. I like to be able to express myself freely in a fast free-flowing loose way - I really like the imperfection of the process”.

Honesty & Emotion in Art

"Many of my paintings are self portraits or semi-biographical, I paint about the things going on in my head at the time of painting. People have said to me that the paintings are angry but I don't think they're angry, I'm just expressing the frustrations of someone who lives with dyslexia. Words frustrate me and fascinate me at the same time. I sometimes don't understand  the sounds of the letters, what they mean and why they don't do what they are supposed to do. Because of this I like to draw quick and loose as opposed to when I’m designing a building and it needs to be more rigid and consistent. I've also taken from street artists who have to paint fast.  I think if you're drawing fast there's an honesty to it because there is no manipulation and overthinking, it's just straight from your head onto the canvas. I love the no phoney approach to that".  

Mindset

This spontaneous approach takes away all inhibitions. "I deliberately don’t correct words that have been misspelled and I sometimes break them apart to emphasize what can be going on in my head”. He also splashes and spills paint loosely over the canvas which keeps the honest approach "for a long time I covered up the writing completely, so as to not expose myself too much to the outside world but as I got older I've stopped doing that.  I'm happy where my art is, at the moment, and  I feel that it's totally me. It's a take it or  leave it approach, I have now." 

Art vs. Architecture

Live painting on the street in Kenmare for Culture Night in County Kerry

“Art is a way of expressing  myself and it’s a nice break from the normal day-to-day work  routine of an architect. The creative process between art and architecture are very different disciplines. With architecture I have specific briefs and goals that I aim to achieve. With art there are no boundaries, I just express what's in my mind at the time that I am working, and in all honesty, I'm trying to get the thoughts out of my mind and on to the canvas.  I see it as a healthy process. Work and life can be stressful at times and I find going to my studio and throwing a large piece of canvas on the ground and painting helps me release all those stresses in a creative and positive way”.

Creative Process

“My technique normally involves a free flowing start to each piece as I set out the scene for the broader context of the work, followed by a slower, drawn out finish as I immerse myself into the painting and endeavor to elicit an answer to the conundrums that I face and to dig myself out of the holes that I've created for myself in my mind and subconscious”

Influences

PIGSY is influenced by artists, musicians, writers and other figures in popular culture. He sites being influenced by artists such as Cy Twombly, Purvis Young, Hawkins Bolden, Karel Appel, Jean Michel Basquiat along with enjoying the work of David Lynch, David Byrne and poet Seamus Heaney and writer Hunter S. Thompson. Musical influences include 1980’s old school Hip Hop along with musicians like Talking Heads, Future Islands, Elvis Presley and currently Fontaines D.C. and The Felice Brothers.

Ranelagh Art Studio

For the past 10 years, PIGSY has been working in his Ranelagh studio in his award winning architecturally significant house in Dublin, Ireland. His art studio is at the top of the house on the third floor and is filled with light streaming from four window lights that flood the birch ply wood clad room that has a glass floor (which he covered in a plastic coating to protect it from the paint!). It’s a light and airy space - the perfect place to create art.

PIGSY in Malaga, Spain

As of August 2020, PIGSY is based in Malaga, Spain with full focus on the creation of art. He has taken a sabbatical from his architectural practice and has embarked, with his wife and dog, on an uncharted year in Spain inspired by all of the artists and creatives that have gravitated to this part of the world before him. He is excited about the adventure ahead of him, where he will fully immerse himself as PIGSY - as a full time artist he knows that he is entering in to an immensely creative period of his life!

PIGSY's “I Find You Fascinating” Solo Art Exhibition by PIGSY

“I Find You Fascinating” by PIGSY, presented by The Kemp Gallery, Dublin

Curated by Steve Kemp, "I Find You Fascinating", the PIGSY solo Art Exhibition opened on Thursday, October 6th 2016 at The Kemp Gallery in Dublin, Ireland.

Featuring ten original artworks including "Attention All" and "Fascinating", the response was extremely positive with most of the paintings selling on opening night.

The opening of your first solo exhibition is one off moment that will never be repeated and as experiences go it was fairly awesome!