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Under the title 'Cinegael',
and for three decades in words and images has recorded
life in the West of Ireland, especially in the Conamara
Gaeltacht. He has been called, and is regarded in centrist
circles, as a 'talented
eccentric' (Ken Gray, Irish Times) and ageing
'maverick' (corporate
RTE & Jim Kemmy). This is as good a way as any to
approach him and his work. He has filmed and photographed from Tatarstan to Morocco,
from India to the United States. His work has been exhibited
from Galway to Los Angeles, from Moscow to Missouri.
Apart from his film work, he has been published by Quartet
Books (London & New York), O'Brien Press, (Dublin),
Brandon Press, (Kerry) and Cló Iar-Chonnacht,
(Galway). Yet he has always remained on the periphery
of mainstream critical consideration in Ireland itself.
Born in Dublin in 1935 and after seventeen different
careers he became a television producer at the age of
27. After a successful career in Irish public broadcasting
Bob Quinn opted in 1969 for the James Joyce tactic of
silence, exile and cunning. He succeeded in only one
of these tactics - exile in Conamara. But in the process
he has produced an impressive body of cinematic, literary
and photographic work.
The film and video company, Cinegael,
which with Seosamh Ó Cuaig and Toni Cristofides
he founded in 1973, concentrated on the Gaeltacht of
Conamara. Quinn still sees this Irish-speaking area
in the West of Ireland as the grain of sand which, in
the William Morris sense, contains and illuminates the
world. Cinegael's original intention was to reinforce
the identity of this threatened linguistic minority:
the group realised that in modern times man's destiny
was stated in political terms. Inspired by the the National
Film Board of Canada's Challenge for Change programme
and using pioneering closed-circuit TV techniques it
recorded local events and controversies. It mediated
successfully between local opinion and public bodies.
Gradually Cinegael began to engage with the larger
polity of Ireland. It evolved into a maker of one-off
film documentaries and dramas which were all screened
on RTE, the Irish Public broadcaster, all well as on
BBC, Channel Four, SBC etc. and which achieved other
international recognition.
Bob Quinn still lives and works in Conamara, still
in collaboration with Seosamh Ó Cuaig and others.
In 1985 he was the first film maker to be elected member
of Aosdána, the Irish Parliament of Artists.
In 1995 he was surprisingly appointed a member of the
RTE Authority (Board of Governors), from which position
he resigned in 1999 and wrote 'Maverick', the first
intimately-informed account of Irish Public Broadcasting.
In 2001 he was given a Lifetime Achievement Award
by the Irish Film Institute.
Note: Most 3rd
level Irish courses in film and media use Bob Quinn's
work as subject matter or, depending on one's perspective,
suitable cases for treatment. Several degree theses
(including one earned at the Sorbonne) have been exclusively
based on Bob Quinn's work; the latest (2002) a Ph.D
from the University of Milan.
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