From the years (x-y) Majella was a chairwoman of the board of directors of the Uilinnn West Cork Arts Centre in Skibbereen. During her tenure she was a driving force in the development, funding and construction of the new purpose built art and exhibition facility which opened in 2015. This landmark building now serves as hub for creativity and expression servicing the south west of Ireland artistic community.
Since the year 2000, Majella played a pivotal role in founding the acclaimed Cork University Hospital Millennium Collection, now home to works by numerous leading Irish artists. The work can be viewed in the corridors and wards of the CUH and grows year on year. Her continued involvement with the CUH Arts Committee underscores her commitment to the arts community in Ireland.
Majellas work is a testament to her profound relationship with the island—a life enveloped by vast waters, governed by the capricious weather, and illuminated by an ever-shifting palette of light. Majella's paintings are a visual exploration of her experiences in this isolated, rural, and enchantingly beautiful part of Ireland. Her intuitive and experimental approach to painting reimagines the perception of her surroundings, allowing her art to echo the profound sense of belonging to the wild Irish landscape.
Majella O’Neill Collins lives and works on the island of Sherkin, just off the West Cork coast. Born in 1964, she studied at Limerick School of Art and Design.
Her work relates directly to her experience of living on an island, surrounded by water, and defined by the ever-changing weather and light. Majella makes paintings which try to make sense of what it means to live in this remote, rural and beautiful part of the world. Her approach is based on intuition and experimentation where painting is a means of reshaping the experience of the world, of examining, formalising and giving shape to perception.