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The first retrospective of the “genius” artist and playwright John Patrick Byrne for more than two decades opens in Glasgow on Friday. A Big Adventure charts the career of the Paisley-born
genius behind The Slab Boys and the 1987 TV show Tutti Frutti which starred Robbie Coltrane and Emma Thompson. One highlight of the show at Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum is a room
displaying more than 40 self-portraits, spanning 1963 to 2020. Paintings of famous figures including Byrne’s former partner, actor Tilda Swinton, and comedian and actor Sir Billy Connolly
also feature in the exhibition, along with more intimate studies of close family and friends. Byrne, 82, said: “It’s been a real pleasure working with Glasgow Museums on this retrospective.
I’ve been in and out of Kelvingrove my whole life. “It’s a delight to be reunited with works I’ve not seen in years, especially as they are hanging on the walls of a place I, and so many
people, love. “I’m glad that with the help of so many friends who’ve loaned artworks we’ve been able to showcase a really broad range, from murals to storyboards and everything in between.
“I suppose you could say it tells much of my life story. I hope visitors enjoy it, seeing art should be fun. For me it’s certainly been a fun, Big Adventure all these years.” A Big Adventure
has seven sections and opens with a brief look at Byrne’s early life. The artist speaks fondly of growing up in Paisley and of working as a slab boy, mixing paint for the designers at AF
Stoddard & Co carpet factory after leaving school. In 1958 he was accepted to study at Glasgow School of Art (GSA) and later returned to AF Stoddard & Co. as a carpet designer,
teaching evening classes at GSA. During this time, he sent a small painting to London’s Portal Gallery, pretending it was the work of his father and creating an alter ego, Patrick. The
gallery offered “Patrick” his first solo exhibition and to this day Byrne occasionally signs his works “Patrick”. The exhibition also explores Byrne’s passion for music as well as writing
and his influence on Scottish culture through his collaborations with other artistic figures such as his friends, the late Baker Street singer Gerry Rafferty, and Billy Connolly, who started
his career as a shipyard welder and part-time folk musician before finding fame and fortune as a stand-up. Martin Craig, curator of Art post 1945 at Glasgow Life Museums, who put the
exhibition together, said: “It’s been an absolute joy working with John on this exhibition. I’ve always been a fan, but learning more about his work, getting to know the man himself and
listening to what friends and family have to say, I’m in awe. “This project started pre-pandemic and, with so many works in private collections, Covid brought it’s challenges. The Fine Art
Society have been amazing and, of course, as soon as you say it’s for John, everyone is more than happy to help. “Words like icon and genius can be overused, but in John’s case they are
perfectly apt. He is, without question, one of the most important artists of the last 70 years and he is so prolific. “We could have filled the exhibition space five times over. Deciding was
hard. A Big Adventure is filled to the gunwales with striking artwork, I hope it captures the anarchic, jubilation and vastness of John’s life and career.” The last Byrne retrospective took
place at Paisley Museum in 2000. A Big Adventure runs from May 27 until September 18. Annette Christie, chairwoman of Glasgow Life, said: “John Byrne is quite simply a true, Scottish
cultural colossus. . . he is rightly considered one of the most gifted artists of the last 70 years.”