Derry O'Sullivan


Derry O'Sullivan is an Irish poet living in Paris, France. He was born in 1944 in Bantry, Co. Cork, Ireland.
His poetry collections in the Irish language are: "Cá bhfuil do Iudás?" - winner of four Literary prizes and the Seán Ó Ríordáin Memorial Prize; "Cá bhfuil Tiarna Talún l’Univers?" ; "An Lá go dTáinig Siad", a long poem about the Nazi occupation of Paris, and "An bhfuil cead agam dul amach, más é do thoil é?" . He has participated in literary festivals in Ireland, France, the US and Canada and his work has been published in numerous literary reviews and anthologies.

Life and work

O'Sullivan's poems have been translated into English and French and several of them can be consulted in Harvard University Library. His work appears in English translation in "The King’s English". "En Mal de Fleurs" is a suite of poems written directly in French.
An English translation by of O'Sullivan's poem won the 2012 , a competition open to poems in all languages and from all periods of history.
O'Sullivan's poem ‘Blip’ was incorporated into the fabric of the Gaelscoil in Bantry, Co. Cork, as part of a public art project in 2014, in collaboration with the artists Cleary&Connolly .
O'Sullivan made the first direct translation of the 10th-Century Irish poem "Cailleach Béara" into French, in collaboration with Jean-Yves Bériou and Martine Joulia, as "Lamentations de la vieille femme de Beare", published in a hand-printed Irish/French bilingual edition and revised in 2006.
A former priest, O'Sullivan is married and has three children. He has taught English at the Sorbonne, the Institut Catholique de Paris and the Institut Supérieur d’Electronique de Paris. He is a senior examiner for the International Baccalaureate. Among other projects he co-founded the Festival Franco-Anglais de Poésie.
The late Reginald Gray, O'Sullivan's friend, provided the cover art of three of his poetry collections, as well the portrait on the right. Other collaborations with visual artists include "Ceamara/Camera", a bilingual Irish/English poem, reply to Jean-Max Albert’s french poem ‘’La camera sans film’’, in a hand-printed, limited-edition art book by Kate Van Houten and "Saorganach/En affranchi à faux", a bilingual French/Irish poem illustrated by in a hand-printed, limited-edition boxed set, . O’Sullivan was commissioned by the PayneShurvell gallery to write an interpretation of Rudolf Reiber's as part of the first solo exhibition in London of the German artist. He has also collaborated with the Mexican artist .