Posts Tagged ‘painting’

Co-operation Ireland

January 26th, 2011

The Gala Legal Dinner in the Dorchester Hotel, London next April will offer one of my paintings to help raise funds for this worthy cause – Co-operation Ireland.

A Flower given to my Daughter

Co-operation Ireland is the leading peace-building charity on the island of Ireland. Our mission is to ‘advance mutual understanding and respect by promoting practical co-operation between the people of Northern Ireland and of the Republic of Ireland‘. Our programmes involve linking groups in the following areas and sectors:

  • Schools and universities
  • Youth and community groups
  • Local authorities
  • Media
  • Local and central government
  • Businesses and business networking/training organisations

Since it was established in 1979, Co-operation Ireland has created opportunities for groups from the two main religious communities in Northern Ireland and from both sides of the border to come together so they can learn about each other’s traditions and cultural backgrounds in order to help build a society which is based on tolerance and acceptance of cultural difference. Co-operation Ireland is experienced in

  • Breaking down sectarianism and racism
  • Encouraging integration of communities
  • Delivering funding programmes, which encourage the creation of vibrant societies
  • Developing bespoke peace and reconciliation programmes for groups and organisations based in other conflict zones around the world
  • Organisation and management of events, conferences and fundraising challenges, which promote community engagement

A Flower given to my Daughter

A poem by James Joyce.

A painting interpretation by Roger Cummiskey painted in watercolor on Indian hand made paper. c. 28 x 23 cms. One only, original.

Ref: P128

Poems of James Joyce

Shakespeare and Co., Paris, published Pomes Penyeach, by James Joyce, in 1927.

An American, Sylvia Beach, who was a patron of Joyce, owned this publishing business and bookshop in Paris. She was the first publisher of Ulysses in 1922.

Joyce also published 36 short poems entitled Chamber Music.

I have painted a series of James Joyce’s Poems in watercolours using waterproof ink on hand made Indian paper. Each painting is given its attributable date of the poems composition.

  • Title: A Flower given to my Daughter
  • Artist: Roger Cummiskey
  • Copyright:©rogercummiskey
  • Size: 28 x 23 cm (unframed)
  • Medium: Watercolour and permanent Ink
  • Ground: Paper
  • My web: www.rogercummiskey.com
  • Notes: - see above.
  • Exhibited: galeria LUCIA, Fuengirola, 2009.  Mirlo Blanco, Mijas Pueblo 2010.

Where´s the Juice?

January 23rd, 2011

http://xteamsystem.com/6497/


Where´s the Juice?

Where´s the Juice?

Xango fruit juice

Xango fruit juice

Mangosteen Juice with Xantones.

Mangosteen Juice with Xantones.


BOOK SHOWCASE

January 23rd, 2011

Authors and Poets  SHOWCASE.

Winner Poetry : Roger Cummiskey for Under Construction.

Roger Cummiskey, Poet & Painter.


Pot Pourri

Click Here.


SHOWCASE FOR LOCAL AUTHORS AND POETS

Organized by Rashpal Singh

Judges: Vijay Singh, Karen Mcmahon, Hanna Murray and Robert Tennison.


Including competition and awards presentation for best fiction, best non-fiction and best poetry.

Winners:

Fiction – Kirsty Denis for her story about the Mijas Pueblo donkey. Second place went to Valery Houven for her book on life in the next century.
Non-Fiction – Joan Fallon for her “Daughters of Spain”. Second was Elizabeth Smith for “Fastrack Spanish”.
Poetry – Roger Cummiskey for “Under Construction”. Second was Adrianne Conway.

Local talent and creativity promotion, supported by The Euro Weekly News Group, Hannah Murray Show (TRE) and Mijas TV and Radio.

ALSO PRESENT ON THE DAY…

Santana Books – The only Spanish Publishing House on the coast publishing in English. Ediciones Santana.

In The Write Light – Creative Writing Workshop

Costa Book Club – A great book club for any avid reader courtesy of Costa Women

Roger Cummiskey – Renowned watercolour artist, taking literary themes for his works and draws poetry.

 Guest Speakers include well known author David Baird amongst two other guest speakers.

On Saturday March 12th 2011 – 10.30am – 1.30pm

At Hotel Tamisa Golf, Camino Viejo Coin km 3.3 29649 Mijas Costa

A book showcase of local published authors, poets and artists.  Supported by local media, and including a competition for best fiction, best non-fiction and best poetry with a panel of professional judges and appearances by guest speakers.  Spanish and other nationalities are welcome to take part in the show.  This is an opportunity to promote local talent, local business and local media.

Under Construction

This painting is completed in the Arabesque style used by Picasso in his illustration of the book of 43 sombre poems Le chant des morts (1948) by Pierre Reverdy (1889-1960).

Event Details –

For show information contact Rashpal: 952 711 377 rashklaw@yahoo.co.uk

Poetry.

Featuring:

Introduction

Under Construction

Rudi and Kofi

Is Love Really in the Air?

Truth

The Edinburgh Celtica

Es Morte

A Painting of a Young Poet

Special Guest – A poem by Lyndy Moore Eggleton - Castle of Sound.

Left: “James Joyce” – Watercolor by Roger Cummiskey Abstract head of James Joyce

(10 x 07 inches)

Introduction:

Writing poetry is a relatively new endeavor for Roger and comes from the heart rather than as a result of any planned, trained or structured way.

Roger’s involvement in the Arts spans a lifetime and has included Board membership of Eucrea Ireland Ltd, – the European Communities’ efforts to include participation in the arts by and with people with disabilities.

He was also involved for many years with Very Special Arts, Ireland and Europe. VSA is the charity founded by former US Ambassador to Ireland, Jean Kennedy-Smith in 1975, and which now has a presence in over 50 countries around the World.

“I take inspiration not only from Ulysses but also Finnegans Wake, A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Dubliners and the many poems written by James Joyce.”

Special Thanks: I wish to thank ShadowPoetry.com for giving me the opportunity to participate in their latest publication, “Before the Last Shadow Fades”. This is their third volume of poetry. It was published for Christmas 2002. It is available from the www.shadowpoetry.com web site.

I also include below a compilation that I made of the musical and poetic language from A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, by James Joyce.

/\ Top

ARTROGER

Under Construction:

I am genius I am Joyce.

A Dubliner of some renown

Hated, reviled, admired;

Poet and critic.

Ten years I had to wait for

Dubliners to be published

For pittance

Because I’m genius

Because I’m Joyce.

Yes, James Jaysas Joyce.

A Portrait helped,

Years and years to complete Ulysses

The greatest daytime novel of all time.

Teaching English as a foreign language

In Trieste and Zurich.

Patronised by a woman of Faith

Though I had none, Harriet Weaver.

Sylvia Beach’s Shakespeare in Paris

My office

And Nora my model, inseparable;

Hemmingway carried me over his shoulder

Drunk, we sang, argued, danced,

Played the piano and guitar.

Dublin, my town, 1904 my year

And 16th June my day;

But all wanted to know, in their

Ignorance if they featured,

And did they what.

They suffered for their lack of faith

In James Jaysas Joyce

Because I’m genius because I’m Joyce.

Mine eyes are a bitch

I’ve moved and moved

Borrowed and borrowed

Written and written.

Blind Homer helped the plot

And Ibsen influenced

So did Gogarty ha! ha!

Beckett learned.

Wild geese abroad.

Bloom was Israelite

One for Molly.

Budgen my pal.

Chamber Music and Pomes Penyeach

Kept debtors at bay.

Then the greatest night time novel

Of all time got out of the Traps.

Anna Livia Plurabelle and H.C.Earwicker

Thought their way through the night

Towards the sea

Work in Progress.

Tim Finnegan had lived at Watling Street

Twins Shaun and Shem come into their own.

Because I’m genius because I’m Joyce.

Yes, James Jaysas Joyce.

/\ Top

� 2002

Author: Roger Cummiskey, 1998

Construction updates: January 2000, September, 2000, April 2002, January 2004.

Originally published for Bloomsday 1998 by The Irish Times Newspaper at:

http://ireland.com/literature/bloomsday/joyce/cummiskey.htm

ARTROGER


Cervantes, Literature, and the Discourse of Politics

January 23rd, 2011

It was a pleasure to speak to you just now about using one of your Cervantes images on the cover of my book with the University of Toronto Press.

I think that of all those other images out there there are so very many cliches.  I was drawn to yours by the pattern, the repetition with slight difference, and a sense that you’re a literarte man as well as an artist!

“And so, to sum it all up, I perceive everything I say as absolutely true, and deficient in nothing whatever, and paint it all in my mind exactly as I want it to be.”
Volume 1, Chapter 25, pg. 157.  Don Quijote by Miguel de Cervantes.

Background image by Roger Cummiskey.

Don Quijote the pluralist - Roger Cummiskey


Buy a print the same size as the original.

Art Prints

Anthony J. Cascardi,

Director :: Townsend Center for the Humanities;

Professor :: Comparative Literature, Rhetoric, Spanish; U.C. Berkeley.

URL:  http://townsendcenter.berkeley.edu/
URL:  http://ajcascardi.org

Ph.D., Harvard University, Romance Languages and Literatures, with distinction, 1980
M.A.,   Harvard University, Romance Languages and Literatures, 1977
B.A,     Princeton University, summa cum laude, 1975

BOOKS

Cervantes, Literature, and the Discourse of Politics (in press)

Cervantes, Literature, and the Discourse of Politics” takes up a set of deeply-rooted questions regarding literature and politics in relation to one of the pillars the European literature:  Don Quixote.

Bookended by Machiavelli and Hobbes, and centrally engaging Plato’s Republic, Cervantes’ novel is fundamentally involved in assessing the place of literature within the state.  Cervantes explores the limits of the possible languages for speaking about politics, implicitly responding to the frankness of Machiavelli ‘s discourse about rulership in the new state and offering literature as an alternative to Hobbes’ and Bacon’s “science of politics.”  At the same time, Cervantes responds to a specific set of historical conditions surrounding the political imagination of the early modern nation and its empire.  These were conditions in which nearly all forms of public speech were constrained, and in which literature provided an opportunity for speaking the truth about politics without speaking about politics directly.

The book provides a thorough reading of Don Quixote as well as a wide-ranging and scholarly treatment of Cervantes’ relationship to his many early modern predecessors, including humanists and rhetoricians.  It deals with the practical roots of political theory in travel writing, and the legacy in Cervantes of classical political questions as engaged by Plato, Aristotle, and Cicero.  The book also makes a broader argument defining the potential role of literature in the discourse of politics.

UPDATE May 06th 2011.

Dear Colleagues,

Chancellor Birgeneau and I are pleased to announce the appointment of Professor Anthony Cascardi as the new Dean of Arts and Humanities, effective July 1, 2011.

Tony holds appointments in the departments of Spanish and Portuguese, Comparative Literature, and Rhetoric.  Besides being a respected scholar, he also has extensive campus leadership and administrative experience.  He has chaired two departments, Comparative Literature and Rhetoric, and was Interim Dean of Arts and Humanities in 2005-06.   He is currently the Director of the Doreen B. Townsend Center for the Humanities.

Tony’s record of scholarship also makes him eminently qualified for the job of Dean of Arts and Humanities.  He has produced a substantial body of work in his primary field of Golden-Age Spanish literature, and he has been highly productive as well in the field of philosophical aesthetics, especially twentieth-century European aesthetic theory, and in narrative theory.  In addition to literature and philosophy, he has published on painting and film.

Tony has a deep understanding of the needs and ambitions of the faculty, staff, and students, and has shown himself to be a creative and successful leader.  He has earned the trust of the administration and the respect and admiration of his colleagues.

Please join us in congratulating Tony on his new appointment and in thanking him for his service to the University.

Sincerely,

George Breslauer
Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost

Now you see it!

June 8th, 2010

La Playa

La Playa - Roger Cummiskey

Reading from Ulysses.

Now you see it!


Restaurante Jinete, Carretera La Cala Golf Km 4.5,  Mijas Costa.

Exhibition: Until July 30, 2010

Open: daily 13-21h.

An exhibition of a variety of paintings, drawings, textiles and photographs by five members of the Andalusian International Artists Group.

Dolores Cummiskey Ireland

Roger Cummiskey Ireland

Juan Cruz Spain

Ian Hunter England

Richard Wood England

The AIA-Group was formed five years ago by professional and dedicated visual artists from around Europe, who are all living and working in Andalucía.

Further information is available from the Chairman, Roger Cummiskey at 952 592 652 or their web site www.aia-group.net

IMG_0919 IMG_0917 IMG_0937 IMG_0925

Your Invitation.

Bloomsday 2010

June 5th, 2010
Mr Bloom

Mr Bloom

The launch of the documentary A Stroll Through Ulysses, by film maker Noel Duffy, combined with interviews with the writer, presenter and narrator, Roger Cummiskey, Artist, will take place on TV via the net during the launch on Bloomsday – 16 June – on the ustream TV Chanel.

As more information comes in this site will be updated.

A Stroll Thro´Ulysses – The film. View here.

Interviews, readings and discussions.

Pinta en Mijas y Enfoca Mijas.

June 5th, 2010

Sunday 6th June. 09-14 h.

Roger Cummiskey, Artist

Roger Cummiskey, Artist

Pinta en Mijas y Enfoca Mijas.Concurso de pintura rápida al aire libre X Edition organized by la Concejalía de Cultura en colaboración con la Asociación Española de Pintores y Escultores.

Enfoca Mijas is a digital photograpohic competition – 2nd Photographic Marathon.

Both take place on June 6th in the white village – Mijas Pueblo.

Roger painting Mijas Pueblo

Roger painting Mijas Pueblo

Window Mijas Pueblo

Window Mijas Pueblo

Fuengirola Art Fair 2010

June 4th, 2010

I attended the opening of The II Fuengirola Art Fair today and have been asked to put a few images onto the Artquilar stand for the next few days.

Ask for Arie or call him at 675130035.

I took some photos of the event that you can view by clicking here.

The images that I will put in are

Castillo Sohail, watercolour at €136.00

On the Beach, watercolour at €136.00

She weeps over Rahoon, watercolour at €300.00

c15-Castillo Sohail Roger Cummiskey

Castillo Sohail

She weeps over Rahoon.

She weeps over Rahoon.

Children Playing

Children Playing

Latest Images

May 21st, 2010

Ch   B62  James Joyce 32.5 x 46 cm

wc P136 Under Construction arabesque 1 250.00    29 x 21 cm

wc P137 Under Construction arabesque 2 250.00    29 x 21 cm

A   L27 Lolita 13 x 17

A   AO75 Father & Daughter

wc L28 Sweny – lemon soap 18 x 12

wc w37 Wild Geese 15 x 10

wc L29 The Bay 13 x 8

pas L31 The Fisherman 15 x 10

wc L30 Sailboat 18 x 25


Bloomsday in Marbella

May 18th, 2010

James Joyce at the Ha´penny Bridge.

Joyce at the Ha´penny Bridge.

Mr Bloom-M30

Mr Bloom.

BLOOMSDAY IN MARBELLA 2010

BLOOMSDAY IN MARBELLA 2010

Bloomsday – June 16th – is an annual celebration among Joyce fans throughout the world, from Fort Lauderdale to Melbourne. It is celebrated in at least sixty countries worldwide, but nowhere so imaginatively, of course, as in Dublin. The novel, Ulysses, by James Joyce recounts the hour-by-hour events of one day in Dublin – June 16, 1904 – as an ordinary Dubliner, Leopold Bloom, wends his way through the urban landscape, the odyssey of a modern-day Ulysses.

This year for the first time it will be celebrated in Marbella on Friday June 18th.

(It has been celebrated in Marbella previously, (ReJoyce Marbella 2009) but not by this new organization.)

The Irish Club Marbella is holding its inaugural ‘Bloomsday in Marbella’ event.

“We will gather together at El BODEGON Café on the Paseo Marítimo in Marbella at 1pm.  There will be a designated area for our group where a glass of wine or two and good tapas (e.g. morcilla con arroz …)  will be served”.

Joycean painter, Roger Cummiskey, will do the first Bloomsday reading from the novel by James Joyce - Ulysses – that gives it´s name to the day from one of the main characters, Leopold Bloom.

A short documentary story entitled “A Stroll through Ulysses”  written and narrated by Roger and made by the Irish film maker Noel Duffy will run in the background. The film visits all of the locations in the novel in 2004 – 100 years after the date on which the novel was set.

Second venue.

Restaurante La Relojera

Calle Fuengirola, 16, 29603 Marbella952 771 447

2nd venue 2.45pm:

Our second venue is RELOJERA and it is a typically-Spanish fish restaurant on Calle Fuengirola at the fishing port at the east entrance of Marbella, right in front of the big “Blue Glass” building, Marina Marbella.  Turn right coming out of Marbella at the Titanic roundabout – east of El Fuerte Hotel.   A variety of freshly caught fish will be served for each table to share, tapas-style, with lots of lemon & bowls of alioli and plates of sun-kissed tomatoes with garlic and olive oil.  1/2 bottle of wine and water included.  Vegetarian and dairy-free options available, just let us know in advance.

Once we are all ensconced with a glass in our lámh, a second reading from Ulysses will be given.  After lunch we can look forward to hearing a Molly Bloom soliloquy being performed by Dee McMath”.

Photos from the day.


More photos of the day.


See the movie on line – A Stroll Thro Ulysses.

Roger will also display a small selection of Joycean themed paintings that will be for sale.



Images:

Joyce at the Ha´penny bridge.

Mr Bloom: This painting is from James Joyce´s caricature of Leopold Bloom, drawn in Myron Nutting´s studio in Paris in the 1920s.

Molly in Gibraltar as a young girl.

The Women of Dublin.


Molly in Gibraltar.

Molly in Gibraltar.

IMG_2741

Women of Dublin

Contact me here! Roger (ArtRoger) Cummiskey.