Joseph McNally (brother)

Brother Joseph McNally (10 August 1923 – 27 August 2002), was an Irish brother from the De La Salle Brothers.[1] He was the founder of St Patrick's Arts Centre ,which is later renamed as the LASALLE College of the Arts, in Singapore.

Brother

Joseph McNally
Personal
Born(1923-08-10)10 August 1923
Dereerin, County Mayo, Ireland
Died27 August 2002(2002-08-27) (aged 79)
Ballintubber, County Mayo, Ireland
ReligionRoman Catholicism
NationalityIrish
OrderDe La Salle Brothers

Early life

McNally grew up in County Mayo.[2] He began studying the arts in high school.[3] McNally left his hometown when he was 14 to join the De La Salle Brothers.[4] He completed his novitiate at the De La Salle Retreat in Castletown, and his scholasticate at De La Salle College in Mallow, County Cork. In 1943, after graduating from De La Salle College, McNally taught at the College, where his interest in the arts grew.[4] He would take art classes at the Mallow Technical School in the evenings while teaching in the daytime.[2]

Education career

In 1946, De La Salle College sent McNally to Singapore to teach at the St Joseph's Institution. After his Singapore posting is over, McNally was sent to the St John's Institution in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and taught there briefly.[1]

He returned to Ireland in 1951, enrolling in the Irish National College of Art. He graduated in 1954, and had his first solo exhibition that same year, at the Brown Thomas Gallery in Dublin.[1]

In 1955, he returned to Malaysia to teach at St Paul's Institution in Seremban and later at St Xavier's Institution in Penang. He joined the staff of St Joseph's Training College in Penang in 1958. In 1962, he became the vice-principal of St John's Institution in Kuala Lumpur and in 1963, he was appointed as their principal. In an effort to be close to the local population, McNally became a Malaysian citizen in 1965.[1]

In 1968, McNally went to Columbia University, New York and took up the Master in Arts programme, studying first painting and later sculpture. He returned to Malaysia in 1970 and taught at St Joseph's Training College. He attained his PhD in Art Education from Columbia University in 1972.[1]

In 1973, McNally went to Singapore again and taught at St Patrick's School. He would become its principal in 1975 and retired in 1982.[5]

In 1984, McNally founded the St Patrick's Arts Centre (now LASALLE College of the Arts, serving as its president. He retired in 1997, receiving the honorary title of President Emeritus.[4]

In 1985, McNally became a Singaporean. Singapore's Ministry of Education sought his advise in their change of the arts syllabus and McNally helped to establish the Art Elective Programme.[6] 1990, McNally was awarded the Pingat Bakti Masyarakat (Public Service Medal) and in 1997, the Pingat Jasa Gemilang (Meritorious Service Medal).[7]

Death

On 27 August 2002, McNally died from a heart attack during a visit to County Mayo, his hometown.[1]

Legacy

In 2006, a new road created outside of the LaSalle College of the Arts in Singapore was named McNally Street in his honour.[8] The Singapore Art Museum held a tribute in 2014, the 12th anniversary of his death.[9]

gollark: It's only really useful if your GPS server is the only one.
gollark: I did work out how to selectively spoof GPS. I just didn't do it.
gollark: Network.
gollark: (GTech™ Policy™, slightly redacted, for context)
gollark: I offload voice chat to espeak and GPT-J, for efficiency.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.