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Cherith McKinstry (4 March 1928 -October 2004) was an Irish painter and sculptor.


Biography

Cherith Boyd was born in Powick, Worcestershire to Lilian Goodwin, a nurse, and Arthur Boyd a psychiatric doctor. She was the middle child of three girls. When Cherith was three years old her father moved the family back to his native Ulster where he was to take a post as superintendent at Antrim Mental Hospital. Boyd was taught by a governess until the age of ten, when along with her older sister she was enrolled as a boarder at Ashleigh House in Belfast. At school she befriended Florence McKinstry whose brother she would later marry. Her father died in 1939 and her mother was appointed matron at Ashleigh House in the same year. When World War II broke-out the students were evacuated to Learmount Castle in the Sperrins, where Boyd contracted polio which was to affect her gait for the rest of her life. Her art teacher Romilly Seymour recommended that she train at
Belfast College of Art The Belfast School of Art, is a School in thUlster University Faculty of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciencesand is physically located at the Belfast campus. Following the results of the Research Excellence Framework 2014 Ulster is ranked within ...
, where she was to meet
Basil Blackshaw Basil Joseph Blackshaw ''HRUA, HRHA'' (July 1932 – 2 May 2016) was a Northern Irish artist specialising in animal paintings, portraits and landscapes and an Academician of the Royal Ulster Academy. Early life and education Born in Glengormley, C ...
and
T.P. Flanagan Terence Philip Flanagan PPRUA HRUA RHA MBE (15 August 1929 – 22 February 2011) was a landscape painter and teacher from Northern Ireland. Early life Terry Flanagan was born on 15 August 1929 in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh. He was the eldes ...
. She maintained a lifelong friendship with Blackshaw. Boyd dated Blackshaw in the early 1950s and painted her portrait in 1958. She studied under
Romeo Toogood Romeo Toogood ''ARCA'' ''HRUA'' (6 May 1902- 11 August 1966) was an Ulster artist and teacher who specialized in landscape painting. Early life Romeo Charles Toogood was born in Belfast on 6 May 1902. He was the son of a stone-carver, Charles ...
between 1950 and 1953. Boyd was presented a prize for the best painting and drawing student of 1951 at the opening of the Ulster Arts Club's annual winter exhibition. In 1954 Boyd was the first female recipient of a Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts travel scholarship worth £75, which she used to study in Italy and France. Boyd was particularly interested in studying Florentine sculptors and their modern counterparts. A Roman Scene was later one of 145 works selected from a thousand submissions for an exhibition at Liverpool's Walker Art Gallery in 1957. Boyd exhibited with eight recent graduates at the YMCA Hall in Belfast in 1954. Exhibitors included
Raymond Piper Raymond Piper ''HRUA HRHA MUniv'' (4 April 1923 – 13 July 2007)Anon: Irish Times 21 July 2007 p16 was British a botanist and an artist.Hackney, P. 2007. Obituary. ''Irish Naturalists' Journal.'' 28: 393-394 Early life Raymond Piper was born ...
, TP Flanagan, Basil Blackshaw and
Markey Robinson David Marcus Robinson ( – 28 January 1999) was an Irish painter and sculptor with a primitive representational style. Early life Robinson was born on in Belfast, Northern Ireland, the son of a house painter. Robinson began drawing at an ...
. In the same year Boyd contributed a sculpture to the British Industries Fair at Earl's Court, one of six Ulster artists to show work, including
Mercy Hunter Mercy Hunter ''HRUA PPRUA ARCA MBE'' (22 January 1910 – 20 July 1989) was a Northern Irish artist, calligrapher and teacher. Hunter was a founding member of the Ulster Society of Women Artists, where she was later to become president and she w ...
, George MacCann and
Dan O'Neill Dan O'Neill (born April 21, 1942) is an American underground cartoonist, creator of the syndicated comic strip ''Odd Bodkins'' and founder of the underground comics collective the Air Pirates. Education O'Neill attended the University o ...
. She taught for a time at Whitehead High School and also at Belfast Art College. Boyd met her future husband at Belfast School of Art,
Robert McKinstry Robert McKinstry ''OBE'', ''ARIBA'' (15 January 1925 – 29 October 2012) was a Northern Irish architect who specialised in conservation and restoration work. McKinstry worked on many prestigious projects including the restoration of St Anne' ...
, an architect and lecturer, whom she married in 1958. She later bore three sons. Cherith held an attic studio at their Rugby Road home until 1968 when the McKinstrys settled at Chrome Hill in
Lisburn Lisburn (; ) is a city in Northern Ireland. It is southwest of Belfast city centre, on the River Lagan, which forms the boundary between County Antrim and County Down. First laid out in the 17th century by English and Welsh settlers, with th ...
where Cherith had a studio attached to the house. McKinstry's earliest works were sculptures which was often evident in her figurative paintings of the 1960s. Her early paintings were often imbued with a sense of suffering and inhumanity as well as endurance, often focusing on Christian interpretations of these themes. She was later to work in a more abstract manner. Her works were influenced by the Dublin painters
Patrick Pye Patrick Pye RHA (1929 – 8 February 2018) was a sculptor, painter and stained glass artist, resident in County Dublin. Pye was born in Winchester Winchester is a City status in the United Kingdom, cathedral city in Hampshire, England. ...
and Charles Brady. McKinstry's first solo exhibition was hosted by the Council For the Encouragement of Music and the Arts in Belfast in 1962. After an absence of four years in which time she had been raising her three sons, McKinstry held a solo exhibition at the New Gallery on the Grosvenor Road, Belfast, in 1967. McKinstry accepted several large-scale commissions including the ''Stations of the Cross'' for St. McNissi Church at Magherahoney which were previewed at the Bell Gallery in 1968. and ''Students'' a mural, for the main staircase at
Queens University Belfast , mottoeng = For so much, what shall we give back? , top_free_label = , top_free = , top_free_label1 = , top_free1 = , top_free_label2 = , top_free2 = , established = , closed = , type = Public research university , parent ...
in 1986. Her largest works were the six canvas ceiling panels she created for the Grand Opera House in Belfast, part of a renovation conducted by her husband in 1979. The two largest panels measured 12 ft by 6 ft. To allow for their creation the McKinstrys cleared their living room of furniture for a period of around a year. Basil Blackshaw assisted McKinstry to stretch the canvases. Before their installation the paintings were displayed alongside preparatory plans and sketches in ''Towards the Opera House ceiling paintings'', an exhibition at the Ulster Museum. In 1975 McKinstry showed a portrait of the Olympic pentathlete Mary Peters at the Arts Council of Northern Ireland Gallery. Studies for a 1974 private commission ''Christ Crucified'' were shown as part of McKinstry's solo show at the Octogon Gallery that autumn. Her works were shown in a solo exhibition at the Kays Gallery in Derry in September 1977. In 1980 McKinstry showed a series of new works in a two person show at the Keys Gallery in Derry, with Charles Brady, where they were to return three years later. McKinstry was the recipient of a £5000 subsistence award from the
Arts Council of Northern Ireland The Arts Council of Northern Ireland (Irish language, Irish: ''Comhairle Ealaíon Thuaisceart Éireann'', Ulster Scots language, Ulster-Scots: ''Airts Cooncil o Norlin Airlan'') is the lead development agency for the arts in Northern Ireland. It ...
in 1983. McKinstry showed on numerous occasions with the
Irish Exhibition of Living Art The Irish Exhibition of Living Art (IELA) was a yearly exhibition of Irish abstract expressionism and avant-garde Irish art that was started in 1943 by Mainie Jellett. Background World War II Ireland During World War II, Ireland remained ...
after her first showing in 1961, with the Figurative Art Group, and through the 1990s with the
Royal Hibernian Academy The Royal Hibernian Academy (RHA) is an artist-based and artist-oriented institution in Ireland, founded in Dublin in 1823. Like many other Irish institutions, such as the RIA, the academy retained the word "Royal" after most of Ireland became in ...
. In 1987 she received an Honorary MA from Queen's University. From 1973 onwards, McKinstry was a frequent exhibitor at the
Royal Ulster Academy The Royal Ulster Academy (RUA) has existed in one form or another since 1879. It started life then, as The Belfast Ramblers' Sketching Club drawn from the staff of Marcus Ward & Co who held their first show in Ward's Library on Botanic Avenue in 1 ...
of Arts annual shows, where she was elected as an Associate member in 1981. The Ulster Museum hosted a solo exhibition of her work in 1980, followed by another at the Gordon Gallery, Derry in 1991. The Narrow Water Gallery in Warrenpoint hosted a joint exhibition of her work with Basil Blackshaw in the summer of 1989.


Death and legacy

Cherith McKinstry died in October 2004. She was survived by her husband Robert, and her three sons, Simon, Leo and Jason. Jorgensen Fine Art in Dublin hosted a retrospective of McKinstry's work in 2006. The exhibition was opened by James Hamilton, the Duke of Abercorn. McKinstry's works can be seen in various public and private collections including the
Ulster Museum The Ulster Museum, located in the Botanic Gardens in Belfast, has around 8,000 square metres (90,000 sq. ft.) of public display space, featuring material from the collections of fine art and applied art, archaeology, ethnography, treas ...
,
Derby Museum and Art Gallery Derby Museum and Art Gallery is a museum and art gallery in Derby, England. It was established in 1879, along with Derby Central Library, in a new building designed by Richard Knill Freeman and given to Derby by Michael Thomas Bass. The coll ...
, Queen's University, Belfast, Irish Linen Centre and Lisburn Museum, and the
Northern Ireland Civil Service The Northern Ireland Civil Service (NICS; ga, Státseirbhís Thuaisceart Éireann; Ulster-Scots: ''Norlin Airlann Cïvil Sarvice'') is the permanent bureaucracy of employees that supports the Northern Ireland Executive, the devolved governme ...
.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:McKinstry, Cherith 1928 births 2004 deaths 20th-century women artists from Northern Ireland 20th-century Irish women artists Alumni of Belfast School of Art British women painters Irish women painters Painters from Northern Ireland Members of the Royal Ulster Academy