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Rachel Joynt
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Born | 1966 (age 57–58)
Caherciveen, County Kerry, Ireland
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Nationality | Irish |
Education | National College of Art and Design |
Occupation | Sculptor |
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Rachel Joynt (born 1966 in Caherciveen, County Kerry) is an Irish sculptor who has created some prominent Irish public art. She graduated from the National College of Art and DesigninDublin in 1989 with a degree in sculpture.[1]
Her father, Dick Joynt,[2] was also a sculptor. Rachel Joynt is preoccupied by ideas of place, history and nature, and her work often examines the past as a substrate of the present. Her commissions include People's Island (1988) in which brass footprints and bird feet crisscross a well-traversed pedestrian island near Dublin's O'Connell Bridge. She collaborated with Remco de Fouw[3] to make Perpetual Motion (1995),[4] a large sphere with road markings which stands on the Naas dual carriageway. This has been described by Public Art Ireland as 'probably Ireland's best-known sculpture' and was featured, as a visual shorthand for leaving Dublin, in The Apology, a Guinness advert. Joynt also made the 900 underlit glass cobblestones which were installed in early 2005 along the edge of Dublin's River Liffey; many of these cobblestones contain bronze or silverfish.
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