Robert Ballagh (born 22 September 1943) is an Irish artist, painter and designer.
He was born in Dublin and studied architecture at the Bolton Street College of Technology.
His painting style was strongly influenced by pop art.
He is particularly well known for his hyperealistic renderings of well known Irish literary, historical or establishment figures.Ballagh grew up in a ground-floor flat on Elgin Road in Ballsbridge, the only child of a Catholic mother and a Presbyterian father who converted to Catholicism, both of whom had played sport for Ireland.
He became an atheist while being educated at Blackrock College.
Before turning to art as a profession, he was a professional musician with the showband Chessmen.
He met his future wife Betty when she was 16 years old; she died in 2011.
He met artist Michael Farrell during this period, and Farrell recruited him to assist with a large mural commission, which was painted at Ardmore Studios.
Ballagh represented Ireland at the 1969 Biennale de Paris.
He has also designed over 70 Irish postage stamps and the last series of Irish banknotes, "Series C", before the introduction of the euro.
He is a member of Aosdána.
Ballagh's paintings are held in several public collections of Irish painting including the National Gallery of Ireland, the Hugh Lane Gallery, the Ulster Museum, Trinity College Dublin, and Nuremberg's Albrecht DĂĽrer House.The late-1960s Civil Rights Movement in British-controlled Northern Ireland and the brutal response of the authorities gave him an enduring interest in republican politics.
In 1989 he was a founder member of the Irish National Congress and chaired it for 10 years.
In 1991, he co-ordinated the 75th anniversary commemoration of the 1916 Easter Rising, during which he claimed he had been harassed by the Special Branch of the Garda SĂochána.He is the president of the Ireland Institute for Historical and Cultural Studies, which promotes international republicanism.
It is based at the new Pearse centre at 27 Pearse Street, Dublin.
However, on 25 July Ballagh ruled out running in the election, saying that he had never considered being a candidate.
His discussions with the parties had been about the election "in general" and he had no ambitions to run for political office.That same month, Ballagh broke ranks with his colleagues in the travelling production of Riverdance in their decision to perform in Israel.
He cited an example of some Americans and Canadians on holiday in Ireland.
"They described most of the National Gallery as being closed along with several rooms in the Hugh Lane Gallery.
I'm glad they didn't bother going out to the Museum of Modern Art in Kilmainham because that's closed too.
At the point I met them, they were returning from Galway where they had found the Nora Barnacle Museum closed too." Ballagh condemned the hypocrisy of political leaders, saying: "I know arts funding is not a big issue for people struggling to put food on the table but we are talking about the soul of the nation."He published his autobiography A Reluctant Memoir in 2018.