Page 6 - Patrick Scott Scrapbooks
P. 6

Nonsense? Not at all Could  *
an appointment with Mr. and Mrs. Hans Juda. A ll we knew was that thev run a mairazine called "Ambassador" •. •
gorgeous glossy coloured way. Then why were Hans Juda
e.nd his wife here ?
a
Y ou'll find thes.e eligible good- ' income types-who have learned that the money lies in t!ie com- mercial world--enjoyiog life with
everyone else.
romantic musician ? Thev don't live in garrets any more, burning the midnight candle and eating baked bean.s
OJI toast,
yearn for
writer or
              \_
15
Top          
f 1960 0.
For there are still 48,960 minutes of Leap Year to tick out. You've plenty of time to      a man. And if ifs money and fame you're after, it's all around. e
      
A      a husband will have
him - by' December 31. It's your.own fault if you're still
sitting lonely on the shelf.
_..
18.00, 6 to 16 sizes, at charming stores in America, or wnte          Walsh.' 1384
way, New York, N. Y. And if e'er you go to Ireland, go on lnsh International Airlines.
that we were talking to the
owners of a trade magazine, this week, though we could issued from London, which not be described as in the deb tells the trade e.ll about such class), we fioated into the things as carpets and furniture Shelbourne yesterday evening, . • . a kind of English Coras one and a half hours late for Trachtala effort, but in a
be it's your strategy and hunting
grounds arc wrong. Ireland still
h.as a rich han·est of bachelors. a shy artist and ... with four to six-figure bank
accounts, successfully avoiding
matrimony.
Y ou artist,
Harry Barnardo, another of our Irish bachelors, and world-known fur designers. An artist to his
finger-tips, he painted pictures some years ago " for fun:· and ended up with a successful one-man exhibition.
Ronnie
Irish products that Switzers are selling.
Now all this must sound like a prelude to a normal commer- cial plug, but if it was. I for- give them e.11.
For within ten minutes, tlhe large Hans J uda had admired the tropical-weight Donegal tweed suit that had been made for me for Monte Ce.rlo, had gone on to his col- lection of contemporary paint- ings (his pen t house in Ken- sington holds pieces by Hilary He:ron, Louis le Brocquy and Paddy Scott), the violin con- certo of Bartek, and the last quartets of Beethoven.
I said that in my Illiterate view, Patrick Scott ea.ch year painted a moon with a jack- daw's nest on top of it, and then next year he painted a jackda,w's nest with a moon on top of it, e.nd I had the pleasure of seeing Hans Juda turn blue, white and red.
As the man himself has been painted by Grah8Jl1 Sutherland (Mr. Sutherland's fee for a portrait Is four to five thousand pounds) , I had the happy feeling of having thrown a
brick through a glasshouse. The Teddy Boy streak breaks out in all of us during H<>rse
Show W eek.
T.C.D.'s grant for picture
loan scheme
TRINITY COLLEGE, Dubt.in, has been given a grant of £2,530 by the Gulbenkian Founda- t ion, towards its picture-lending scheme           a year ago, and £2,000 of t!his sum is to be
spent on or.igina1l works.
Yesterday, Vhe first five          
purohased were on sho·w in the Graduates' Memoriail Building in an 'exhibition which also included the fuild ooU!ection o f 106 f r a m e d re- productions avaifable for students
to hire for their rooms this term. The nucleus of the origina[ collection consists of paintings by Jack Yeats, Evie Hone, Patrick Co!llins Pa,trick Scott and John Kelly, 'and a gift addition of a Mainie Jet1lett picture, presented
by Misos Stelfa Frost.
The picture - lending scheme
started with 26 framed reproduc- tions bought !a.st year with ·the sum of £100 given for the purpose by graduates and another 15 pre- sented    gifts. Mr. G. W. P. Dawson, who iis in charge of the sdheme, says that there has been a steady demand from students for the pictures and that further      chases of original work by Insh artists are intended.
And how about our famous Cast your nets in luxury athlete - Ronnie Delany, whose ballrooms, golf clubs, symphony name was followed at the Olym- concerts, dog and horse shows, _pic .Games so carefully? Gay,         and "fighting fit," with a Villanova University (U.S.A.) ca_reer,        . is one young
    
the racecourse, the hunting field, fishin.g festivals, car racing and beagling. You won't find them in the cheap seats of the cinema any more.
Read up' (while you have the time) on philosophy, psychology, Yogi. progressive jazz, archeology, cttess ano iii'lernational affairs. They've all got the same quest : "a girl who thinks."
Irishman still w1tiliout a wife.
.If it·s music you want. you might think abm:tt Dermot O'Hara, the conductor of Radio Eireann's Light Orchestra. Der- mot's name is famous abroad. especially in Germany where he has been invited again and agai'll
How to guess his bank to conduct, and while music is account? Pick the types w.ho his life, you migilt be able to
lounge around in casual sweaters ins.tead of immacubte suits, wlho drive old cars (though they coura afford a new Rolls) and enjoy a boiled    as muoh as caviare, with no apologetic smile.
Who?
What's "available" for the girl who wants to become "Mrs"? Just who are Ireland's bachelor.s worthy of investiga- tion?
We turn the spotlight on: 21-year-old the       Garecl1 Browne. Vastly interested in Irish music and folk-lore, a great friend of Brendan Behan (he flew to New York for the opening of his play a few weeks ago}.
He lives in a Dublin mews and enjoys the £250,000 he inherited at 2t.
Cork-born Pat Scott, a shy, unassuming. but famous, artist and architect, is-at 39--still an " unhooked" bachelor. His name
.is famous in America, Sweden, Germany and Britain, as well as here.
He too, lives his baohelor life i;. a Dublin mews, which he shares, he says, with       called "Miss Mouse." But his pictures whicli hang around the world, are priced in hun- dreds of pounds apiece !
Mink, squirrel and Persian lamb are always around Dubliner
       wit.Ii the violins !
We also suggest-for your con- srderation before Leap Year 'dis· appears for four years--meeting BiJly Noyek, a Dublin lawyer who is Master of the Golden Beagles in his spare time; Bill Anderson, who. though an Irish- man. is Turkish Consul in Dublin and tall, fai r (and handsome as well); Martin Scott, dark, cfeb. bonair and interesting, who manages the De Vesci Estate in Abbeyleix:.
Edward McGuire. artist son of Senator McGuire, and just returned to Ireland from his Paris artist's studio. is another suggestion and, for the theatre. fam, how about Leo McCabe,
RON DELANY
LIAM WARD
HARRY BARNARDO
ftOR€nC€ W<llSh: ClOth€S With th€ Ch.\Rffi or.\BROGU€
Irish painter, Patrick Scott, finds the girl in embroidered cham?ray                paintable. Be an inspiration yourself. Wear this smock dress to lounge in,       1n, go casually to town in. very artistic in gold, blue, red or olive with             embroidery colors. About
               
He is Pat Scot! architect
Because, for the first time, Jimmy Chapman of Switzers they are including in their introduced us, and we found trade magazine the kind of
Director of the Theatre. Dublin ?
Olympia
In ·oil
Unles6 you want to hang around, unloved and siingle. fo'r anather 1,494 da·ys, tiH next Leap Year. yiou had OO!ter get busy on a husband1hiunt.
After all. ,   should 11hese eligible baobelurs-and many more Like them-be aUowed to go rolick.ing aroond, carfree and unattactied. w.tien they might buy you a lcxury home, a mink coat, yadJ.t or champagne ?
SUNDAY REVIEW. NOVEMBER '1:1, 19'1
*
MET Victor Waddington formerly of South Anne Street, Dublin, now of Cork Street, London, on the stairs as I went up into the Dawson Gallery to get a preview of Daniel O'Neill's exhibition.
Top of beauty tree!
7 43 Apple Blossom
SKIN PERFUME PJastic Spray bottle, 9/-. Green Velvet (745),
JO/- and White Magnolia
(746). 11/-. Available also
685 Apple Blossom DUSTfNO POWDER, BA TH SOAP AND BATH CUBES Ill gift box. 15/-. Also in Green Velvet (686), 15/3.
Helena Rubinstei
"
CHRISTMAS G•FTS
HELENA RUB!NSTl!lN • lA CROMWELL'S QUARTERS ' DUBLIN
 
FIDEILING a hit fragile (we have now seen every da.wn
e.Mi ·' 4
I
Victor told me he had just stepped off a plane, and when I remembered that it was he
who had introduced the Belfast- born painter to Dublin some years ago I was not surprised that his first visit on arriving in the city was to the Dawson Gallery.
Leo Smith, whom you see here fixing a red seal to one of Daniel O'Neill's lovely paintings worked originally in the South Anne Street gallery before he struck out on h is own and opened the Dawson Gallery.
Ineidentally, the Dawson Gal- lery was given a new look re- cently when improvements, designed by artist and architect Patrick Scott, were carried out, making it ideal for the showing and viewing of pictures.
$1,000 PRIZE FOR IRISH ARTIST
A prize of $1.000 for a painting by an lrish art·ist has been awarded to the Cork·bom artist, Patriok Scott, in the Guggenheim lnter- national Award, for his painting, "Bog Grasses."
l'his painting and four others from this countrv will be sent to New York where thev will be exhibited togelher with -five works from each of 28 other coun.tries for an international award of $10,000. Tbe other four paintings are "Masquerade" bv Gerard Dillon, "Tension Area" by Richard Kingston . "Standing Figure" by
Louis le Brocquy. and "The Cellar· men" by Nano Reid.
Patriok Scott was born in 1921 ·in Kilbrittain. Co. Cork, He is a graduate in architecture of U.C.D. He has been painting since 1941 and this year he will represent Ireland at the Biennale at Venice.
The jury for the national award for Ireland was : Thomas Mc· Greev y (representing , the Jnter·
national Council of Museums), R. R. Figgis (representing the lnter· naLiona1 A ssociation of Plastic Arts), and James White !represent·
iog the JnternalionaI Association of Art Critics).


































































































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