Adrian Gallagher’s fascination with the sublime has led him to explore the exquisite nuances of nature and culture. His portraits have a dark intensity, highlighting the unreachable interior circumstances of his subjects. The women in Gallagher’s intricate ink paintings embody the natural phenomena occurring around them, taking on the characteristics of the wind and sea, and suggesting an intimate relationship between nature and individuality. The facial features alone express a whole gamut of emotion, from reflection to furor. His work engages a beauty-inspired dialogue that has compelled thinkers and artists for centuries. Like Immanuel Kant and Caspar David Friedrich before him, Gallagher is driven to understand the emotional insights that exist just below consciousness. In his paintings, realism, romanticism, darkness and beauty coexist as one inseparable entity. "My art work is an honest effort at approaching the terror of beauty, and all of the complications that it may broach."
A graduate of Dun Laoighaire IADT, Gallagher has exhibited widely throughout Ireland. He currently lives and works in Ireland.
The sublime is the manifestation of what we feel when faced with our own mortality. Regardless of faith or creed, sublime art evokes a religious or spiritual experience. The sublime is an intimate personal experience dependent on the individual circumstances and life knowledge of each viewer. It is not rational or balanced, but an emotive response that is stimulated by the profound and the powerful. The sublime transcends the formalities and generalities of society, culture, and organized religion, instead what it offers is a glimpse of nature’s immortality.