
An interview between the artist Paul Daly and Dermott Hayes
Sculptor Paul Daly never sculpted before he made his dream come true. He grew up steeped in the lyrics and music of Thin Lizzy and Phil Lynott, sitting on the floor of his parents' home in Raheny, doodling with crayons while his older brother rocked out to Thin Lizzy and Shades of a Blue Orphanage.
He had a close encounter with his hero once while on a weekend jaunt with a buddy around some Howth village drinking haunts. 'It was in the early '80s,' he recalls, 'we were coming down from the Cock Tavern, along Abbey St when there he was, tall as life…leather strides, white shirt, black boots.
We didn't say hello and I regret it since but, you know how it is, we thought it would be uncool.' That regret hung with him. While his brother played air guitar to 'The Rocker' and 'Vagabonds of a Western World,' Paul drew his hero, the Crumlin Cowboy. He got a job, fell in love, and raised a family. Philo died and his legend grew.
New Zealand "All Black" Dan Carter passes the ball to Philo.
Paul kept his dream alive by attending Smiley Bolger's annual Vibes for Philo. Then serendipity stepped in. "I saw Philo's mother, Phyllis on the Kelly Show in 2001 and she said the Roisin Dubh Foundation was going to raise the money for a statue to commemorate him. She said they'd be looking for an artist to do it. I knew it had to be me.'
That single-mindedness reaped its reward. Paul experimented with clay and soft wax. He created an image of that man he'd seen back in Howth in the '80s, standing tall and proud with the swagger of the cowboy and the vagabond. 'It was what he was all about,' says Paul. The statue was cast life-sized in bronze by Cast Foundry of South Brown Street, The Liberties from Paul's original bronze maquette that now stands on the shelves of Bruxelles' bar.