Interview: Enda O’Donoghue talks to Susan Hollan
Included in issue 4 of Occupy Paper published in October 2010 and the complete Issue is available to download or read online here: http://www.scribd.com/doc/38755445/Issue-Four-Occupy-Paper
Occupy Space is based in Limerick, Ireland and is an artist run initiative. More details here: http://occupy-space.blogspot.com/
Susan Holland– Enda, your current practice engages a broad spectrum of photographs, taken from the public domain, which then undergo a transformative process into painted works. How do you go about filtering these images?
EO’D- There is something inherent with current mobile technology which has changed the very nature of public and private and then there is an ongoing debate at the moment about people’s rights of privacy both in the online and offline world. This is certainly something which has been an influence on my ideas but I am also interested in ideas of identity and a kind of open-ended pictorial narrative and for me the works that you mentioned are also playing with these ideas. I should add that with each photo that I work with I make contact with the original photographer to request their permission and in some cases I have ended up staying in contact with them. This has been a distinct parallel strand to the work which is partly as a way of dealing with the anonymous nature of the Internet and also a reaction to the issues surrounding online copyright.
SH- Indeed there is a suggestion of voyeuristic gaze within some of your recent works, particularly in paintings such as Too slutty? and Mistaking the Peplum. Is this perhaps a comment on the extent of uncensored imagery uploaded, or perhaps the narcissism of the individual as a reflection of society as a whole?
regard to the painting process, have been Gerhard Richter and Malcolm Morley. Also over the past few years I’ve been quite interested by some of the new art coming out of China, in particular the work of Xie Nanxing.