The date noted is the year the plate was finished, but often he began work on a plate many years earlier. He explained his method of working: ‘I made a lot of sketches and took a lot of photos so I could remember details. I never draw or scratch after photos, the idea, the ‘feeling’, will die in a way then. For me, making art involves waiting, I look upon a proof or a drawing, thinking and waiting for the idea, the feeling, to ‘develop’. Taking time for an idea to mature. I always print my copperplates myself and I use a simple steel needle for the drypoint works.’ The story behind the print, in the artist’s own words, was written in February 2024.
2015 marked the 150th anniversary of William Butler Yeats's birth on June 13, 1865. On the occasion of the anniversary, Catherine O´Riordan and Stephen Lawlor SO Fine Art Editions Dublin, curated an exhibition of work by contemporary artists and poets inspired by Yeats's oeuvre. A solander box containing a full set of the prints and a catalogue was produced. Lina and I were invited to contribute, and I produced this work, a larger version of the 2004 print of trees outside Killala called ‘Way Out’. The title of the Yeats poem that inspired me was ‘Red Hanrahan's Song About Ireland’.
Inscriptioncentre right: Lars Nyberg
lower right: beside the road from Ballina to Killala
