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4 April - 12 August
2007
Admission free.
The role of the 'Fantastic' in Irish Art is the focus of
the National Gallery's Print Gallery exhibition featuring over 50
works on paper, sculpture and stained glass produced by Irish artists
between 1870-1930.
From the work of illustrator
Richard Doyle (1824-83) to the impressive stained-glass artist,
Harry Clarke (1889-1931), and sculptor Oliver Sheppard (1865-1941),
these artists created evocative and fascinating works of art intended
to delight or unsettle their audience.
Dr. Róisín
Kennedy, curator of the show and author of the accompanying exhibition
brochure, says that each artwork displays an awareness and understanding
of the 'Fantastic'. This is concerned with awakening the
viewer's imagination and challenging conventional ways of seeing
by drawing their attention to the ambiguity of everyday experience.
Contemporary European
and Anglo-Irish literature was often a vital resource for artists,
especially in the work of Harry Clarke, whose stained-glass panel
piece, The Song of the Mad Prince (1917), was inspired by
Walter de La Mare's poem. In this intricate and highly coloured
glass work set in a walnut cabinet, the artist depicts the image
of a young man standing between his parents at the graveside of
his lover, creating a particular aura for its viewer, one that 'transcends
the mundane realities of its domestic setting.'
In Richard Doyle's watercolour The Triumphal Entry, a Fairy Pageant,
the artist depicts fairies enjoying an official parade, a theme
inspired by late 19th century interest in folklore and fairytales.
Doyle specialised in these scenes, many of which were accompanied
by verses by the Irish-born writer, William Allingham.
Among the other artists
represented in the show are William Orpen (Merchant Arch),
George Russell (Spirit or Sidhe in a landscape) Wilhemina
Geddes (Cinderella Undressing her Ugly Sister), Beatrice
Glenavy (Prayer for a Little Child), Art O'Murnaghan (Men of
the Coasts) and Dan O'Neill (Scarecrows at Newtownards).
The exhibition will be
on display in the Print Gallery from 4th April until 12th August
2007. Admission is free.
'The Fantastic in Irish
Art' was curated by Dr. Róisín Kennedy, Yeats Curator,
assisted by Anne Hodge and Niamh MacNally of the Prints and Drawings
Department. The works for the exhibition are drawn from the National
Gallery's collection of prints and drawings and Yeats Archive, as
well from public and private collections.
An accompanying illustrated
brochure is available from the Gallery Shop (€2). A series
of talks around the exhibition will take place in mid April. (www.nationalgallery.ie)
For further information
& images, contact:
Valerie Keogh
Press & Communications Office
National Gallery of Ireland
Tel. 01-661 5133
Email press@ngi.ie
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