OILEÁN:

Inis Mor Image Name: Inis Mor Description: Oilean Copyright: © RTÉ Stills Library RTÉ. This image may be reproduced in print or electronic format for promotional purposes only. Any further use of this image must be re-negotiated separately with RTÉ. Use is subject to a fee to be agreed according to the current RTÉ Stills Library rate card.
Pat Butler with Cyril O’Flaherty Image Name: Pat Butler with Cyril O’Flaherty Description: Oilean Copyright: © RTÉ Stills Library RTÉ. This image may be reproduced in print or electronic format for promotional purposes only. Any further use of this image must be re-negotiated separately with RTÉ. Use is subject to a fee to be agreed according to the current RTÉ Stills Library rate card.
Cyril O’Flaherty Image Name: Cyril O’Flaherty Description: Oilean Copyright: © RTÉ Stills Library RTÉ. This image may be reproduced in print or electronic format for promotional purposes only. Any further use of this image must be re-negotiated separately with RTÉ. Use is subject to a fee to be agreed according to the current RTÉ Stills Library rate card.
Cyril O'Flaherty Image Name: Cyril O'Flaherty Description: Oilean Copyright: © RTÉ Stills Library RTÉ. This image may be reproduced in print or electronic format for promotional purposes only. Any further use of this image must be re-negotiated separately with RTÉ. Use is subject to a fee to be agreed according to the current RTÉ Stills Library rate card.

 

Inis Mór –  the biggest of the Aran Islands is home to Cyril O’Flaherty, a remarkable man who’s a passionate farmer, poet, a talented artist and a father of two.  Cyril is “The New Man of Aran”.  

The series looks at six different islands off the Irish coast. The programmes each reveal an unusual insight – not just into one particular island, but of the wider experience of island life.

Inis Mór

Cyril Ó Flaithearta is an artist of extraordinary power and vision. He’s also a part-time farmer, polytunnel vegetable grower and occasional tour guide whose unique vision of his world creates a remarkable insight into his beloved Inis Mór, the largest of the Aran Islands.

Cyril is married to Fionnuala Ní Earnáin, herself an artist of considerable achievement. Fionnuala teaches art at Gairm Scoil Éanna in Kilronan. They have two young sons, Ciarán and Fionn.

This portrait of a man and a woman, a family and their island is a love story of great passion and tenderness. In a world circumscribed by the material, Cyril, Fionnuala and their children inhabit a different place. Their simple daily routines paint a richer canvas. Bringing the cows home from the lower pastures becomes an odyssey in rare lyricism; these caterpillars on that wayside whitethorn open up a world to be explored and shared and wondered about; that nest of ants under a rock in the corner of a field is a city to be imagined; the old ‘finnscéalta’ make for rich bedtime stories and dreams of  the wild and the exotic.

All the while the stark, unrelenting Inis Mór landscape yields up ecclesiastic, linguistic and cultural imagery which refines this man, his family, their lives and art. In this family living is an art and art is living.

‘Through painting, I sing the island and the island sings me’, says Cyril.

According to the ancients, there was no gap between the word and the act. That unity is embodied in Cyril, Fionnuala and family, making Óileán: Fear le Fís’ a portrait to be savoured.