• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Painting Perceptions

  • Home
  • Workshops
  • Advertise
  • About
    • About Painting Perceptions
    • Contact Us
    • Links
  • Articles
    • Posts Archive List
    • Great Reads
    • Sounding Technical
    • Art Politics
    • Art Books
  • Interviews
    • Featured Interviews
    • A Question or Two
    • notable painters

Mariah ONeill

October 8, 2020 By Larry 5 Comments

<em>Vin Ganapathy</em>, neocolour crayon and wash, 16x16 inches untitled <em>Tim Lowly and Roger Wagner in Oxford</em>, neocolour and wash, 12x16 inches <em>Suzanne Deierlein</em>, oil/card, 10x14 inches <em>Wen-Mu Jiang, chinese artist,</em> ink and brush, 12x16 inches untitled untitled <em>Mark Rothko</em>[from a stock photo], ink/ card, 12x16 inches Rick Schulman neocolor on yupo <em>Pedro Villarubia,</em> neocolor crayon/p, 9x16 inches untitled Andrea Rolon for jkpp Pepe <em>Mingus</em> [from a stock photo], pencil/p, 9x9 inches John Lee Hooker, neocolor untitled <em>Miniver</em>, neocolour and wash, 10x12 inches <em>Pat Hayes</em>, ink/brush/paper,  8x12 inches <em>Queen Elizabeth II</em>, oil/c, 14x14 inches <em>Pedro Villarubia</em>, oil/c, 15x20 inches <em>Norman Mallory</em>, pencil/p,  14x14 inches <em>Vera Graham</em>, watercolour  on card,  9x12 inches <em>Verity</em>, neocolour/p, 12x12 inches <em>Self</em> [ from an old photo], oil/card, 12x18 inches <em>Martin Beek, age 11</em>, neocolour/p, 12x12 inches untitled

A while ago on Facebook, I started seeing a large number of posts of stunning portraits, landscapes, and more by many lesser-known European artists from the early to mid 20th century. Many of these artists were unfamiliar but there was a common thread of originality, intensity, and poetic vision that captivated me and inspired me to find out more about these painters. But first, I wanted to find out about this Facebook poster, Mariah ONeill. Someone with such a good eye for great paintings must also be an interesting artist to check out. I wasn’t disappointed. I was enchanted by her many expressive portrait drawings which capture some remarkable aspect of the sitter’s personality, while simultaneously celebrating the transformation from marks on paper into something visceral and alive.

I wrote to her hoping to learn more. She sent me a link to her Flickr page(see here www.flickr.com/photos/mariahoneill ) and stressed that she had little in the way of formal training and was largely self-taught, mainly by copying old masterworks by Rembrandt, Rubens, Caravaggio, etc. as well as spending much of her time growing up doodling. She said she did take some classes at her local art center and took one semester at PAFA but had to drop out due to needing to take care of her mother who was dying. Later, instead of art school, she went back to school to become a psychotherapist. She has had to struggle with serious chronic illness since 2005 and currently lives in the New England area.

She attributes her involvement with an online drawing group, “Julia Kay’s Portrait Party” as being a big influence as there were a lot of excellent artists there who enjoyed drawing each other from photos, where many of her portraits came from. She states that her biggest artistic influences are Bonnard, Vuillard, Van Gogh, and Matisse.

I asked her what was most important for her with regard to her artmaking? She replied,
“The most important thing for me is curiosity and having fun. I enjoy the process of making art and am less interested in the product. I never finished anything. I am not very verbal about art, although I enjoy it when artists have something to say. I love to watch what happens when I do this or that, it remains a great mystery to me how art happens.

Self [ from an old photo], oil/card, 12×18 inches

Filed Under: At a Glance, drawings, portraits, slide show

Donate to Painting Perceptions


Donations to Painting Perceptions helps this site greatly, please consider your gift today.

Previous Post: « Interview with Jeffrey Carr
Next Post: Interview with John McNamara »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Michael Kent

    October 11, 2020 at 6:48 pm

    A well-deserved tribute to a most sensitive, talented artist. Just like a good writer must read like a fiend, a good visual artist must soak in and digest the greats and few fit that category better than Rembrandt and indeed Van Gogh. Thank you for shining the spotlight on Mariah.

    Reply
  2. Calvin S. Moore

    September 22, 2021 at 11:19 am

    Mariah is so good, and so humble. She has a seriously good eye for art as demonstrated by her Facebook posts of famous and not so famous artists’ works, and her infrequent posts of her own equisite work. Brava!

    Reply
  3. Clyde Semler

    September 23, 2021 at 6:29 am

    I met Mariah on Flickr over ten years ago. At that time she was posting her portrait drawings in JKPP, Julia Kay’s Portrait Party. Her portraits always shined with robustness and authority. Her craft and intensity always amazed me. I am happy to have a pencil portrait of me which Mariah so generously sent me. In more recent times Mariah has been searching for and posting artists’ works which have pretty much fallen out of the spotlight or, indeed, have never even been seen before online. Her findings inspire us daily and help us get our minds attuned to the beauty which can surround us if we take the time to look for it. Maria is kind, gentle, generous, self-effacing to a fault, open hearted and a unique and gifted artist. I am proud and happy to have her as a friend.

    Reply
  4. Steve Huison

    September 23, 2021 at 10:29 am

    Mariah is one of the reasons why I draw and paint most days. Her constant and steady flow of works by unknown artists (or unknown to me at least) on Facebook as nourished my appetite for painting and educated my understanding of technique, light, colour and history. She is one of the most truly beautiful human beings I have had the privilege to know and am proud to have some of her works hanging on my wall at home here in England. Thank you Mariah for being in my life.

    Reply
  5. Erik Johnson

    September 27, 2021 at 6:52 am

    Mariah is one of my favorite artists among those I have discovered on Facebook or Flickr. She is amazingly perceptive visually and psychologically, and often produces the most compelling portraits. She appears to have sprung fully formed from nowhere; her earlier still lives and horse drawings and paintings are wonderfully accomplished. An extremely sensitive and kind artist. I don’t know how I missed this article when it was written last year.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Footer

More Selections from the Archive

Interview with Susannah Phillips

Susannah Phillips was raised in London and attended the Slade School of Fine Art in London. Her paintings have been in many solo and group exhibitions in London, New York and Provincetown, MA, and are included in numerous private collections. In 2014 and 2017, she was awarded the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation Residency. The artist lives and ...

Read More

Conversation with Lois Dodd

Lois Dodd has been painting her everyday surroundings for sixty years. Her current exhibition, from February 26 through April 4, 2015 at the Alexandre Gallery in NYC shows twenty-four recent small-scaled paintings that depict familiar motifs such as gardens, houses, interiors and views from windows. Dodd, now eighty-seven, is an iconic figure of ...

Read More

Interview with Ann Gale

by Larry Groff I am honored that Ann Gale agreed to this telephone interview and thank her greatly for being so generous with her time and attention with sharing thoughts about her art and process. Ann Gale is a leading American figurative painter living in Seattle. Her portraits were shown alongside other leading painters of the figure ...

Read More

See More;

Painting Perceptions was started in 2009 by Larry Groff to promote the ideas, practice and experience of painters working from observation in a modernist vein from around the world through interviews, essays, videos and community. It later evolved to include imagination-based and abstract painting as well.More Info →

Copyright © 2025 Painting Perceptions on the Foodie Pro Theme