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National Gallery of Ireland

The National Gallery of Ireland (Irish: Gailearaí Náisiúnta na hÉireann) houses the national collection of Irish and European art. It is located in the centre of Dublin with one entrance on Merrion Square, beside Leinster House, and another on Clare Street. It was founded in 1854 and opened its doors ten years later.[1] The gallery has an extensive, representative collection of Irish paintings and is also notable for its Italian Baroque and Dutch masters painting. The current director is Caroline Campbell.[2]

National Gallery of Ireland
Gailearaí Náisiúnta na hÉireann
Location within Dublin
Established1864 (1864)
LocationMerrion Square West,
Dublin, Ireland
Coordinates53°20′27″N 6°15′09″W / 53.340914°N 6.252554°W / 53.340914; -6.252554Coordinates: 53°20′27″N 6°15′09″W / 53.340914°N 6.252554°W / 53.340914; -6.252554
TypeArt museum
Key holdingsKitchen Maid with the Supper at Emmaus
Portrait of Doña Antonia Zárate
The Taking of Christ
Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid
Connemara Girl
DirectorCaroline Campbell
Public transit accessClare Street bus stop
Dublin Pearse
Dawson Street (Green Line)
Websitewww.nationalgallery.ie

History

In 1853 an exhibition, the Great Industrial Exhibition, was held on the lawns of Leinster House in Dublin. Among the most popular exhibits was a substantial display of works of art organised and underwritten by the railway magnate William Dargan. The enthusiasm of the visiting crowds demonstrated a public for art, and it was decided to establish a permanent public art collection as a lasting monument of gratitude to Dargan. The moving spirit behind the proposal was the barrister John Edward Pigot (1822–1871), son of David Richard Pigot, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and he became one of the first governors of the gallery.[3] The façade of the National Gallery copies the Natural History building of the National Museum of Ireland which was already planned for the facing flank of Leinster House. The building itself was designed by Francis Fowke, based on early plans by Charles Lanyon, and was completed and opened in 1864.[4][1]

The gallery was not founded around an existing collection, and when the gallery opened it had just 112 paintings.[1] In 1866 an annual purchase grant was established and by 1891 space was already limited.[4] In 1897, the Dowager Countess of Milltown indicated her intention of donating the contents of Russborough House to the gallery. This gift included about 223 paintings, 48 pieces of sculpture, 33 engravings, much silver, furniture and a library, and prompted construction from 1899 to 1903 of what is now called the Milltown Wing, designed by Thomas Newenham Deane.[1][5]

At around this time Henry Vaughan left 31 watercolours by J.M.W. Turner with the requirement that they could only be exhibited in January, this to protect them from the ill-effects of sunlight. Though modern lighting technology has made this stipulation unnecessary, the gallery continues to restrict viewing of the Vaughan bequest to January and the exhibition is treated as something of an occasion.

Another substantial bequest came with the untimely death in the sinking of the Lusitania of Hugh Lane (1875–1915), since 1914 director of the gallery; not only did he leave a large collection of pictures, he also left part of his residual estate and the Lane Fund has continued to contribute to the purchase of artworks to this day. In addition to his involvement in the gallery, Hugh Lane had also hoped to found a gallery of modern art, something only realised after his death in the Hugh Lane Gallery. George Bernard Shaw also made a substantial bequest, leaving the gallery a third of royalties of his estate in gratitude for the time he spent there as a youth.

The gallery was again extended in 1962 with a new wing designed by Frank DuBerry of the Office of Public Works. This opened in 1968 and is now named the Beit Wing. In 1978 the gallery received from the government the paintings given to the nation by Chester Beatty and in 1987 the Sweeney bequest brought fourteen works of art including paintings by Picasso and Jack B. Yeats. The same year the gallery was once again given some of the contents of Russborough House when Alfred Beit donated 17 masterpieces, including paintings by Velázquez, Murillo, Steen, Vermeer and Raeburn.

In the 1990s a lost Caravaggio, The Taking of Christ, known through replicas, was discovered hanging in a Jesuit house of studies in Leeson Street in Dublin by Sergio Benedetti, senior conservator of the gallery. The Jesuits have allowed this painting to be exhibited in the gallery and the discovery was the cause of national excitement. The painting was on loan to an Italian gallery from February until July 2010 as part of Caravaggio's 400th anniversary. In 1997 Anne Yeats donated sketchbooks by her uncle Jack Yeats and the gallery now includes a Yeats Museum. Denis Mahon, a well-known art critic, promised the gallery part of his rich collection and eight painting from his promised bequest are on permanent display, including Jacob Blessing the Sons of Joseph by Guercino.

List of directors

Millennium Wing

 
The Millennium Wing in March 2012

A new wing, called the Millennium Wing, was opened in 2002. Unlike the previous two extensions, this new wing has street frontage and the English architects Benson & Forsyth gave it an imposing Bowers Whitbed, Portland Stone façade and grand atrium. The design originally involved demolishing an adjoining Georgian terrace house and its ballroom mews; however, the Irish planning appeals authority, An Bord Pleanála, required that they be retained.

Master development plan

 
View of interior, c.2013

In March 2011, the Office of Public Works (OPW), in association with the gallery, commenced work on the historic complex at Merrion Square to address a critical need for the repair and renovation of the fabric of the Dargan (1864) and Milltown (1903) wings, together with the provision of much needed additional accommodation. The first phase of the works programme involved the removal and replacement of the Dargan Wing roof. The next two phases of the project involved the replacement of the Milltown Wing roof, followed by an extensive upgrade of the fabric and services of the two buildings whilst reclaiming their original period elegance. Refurbishment of the two wings was completed in June 2017.

Location, access and facilities

The National Gallery of Ireland is located in the heart of Georgian Dublin. There are two entrances, one at Merrion Square and the other at Clare Street. Admission to the gallery is free and many talks, tours and events, as well as the audioguide, are also free of charge. The gallery launched a free smartphone app in 2013.

Dublin Bus routes 4, 7 and 7a all pass by the gallery. The Pearse Street DART station is 5 minutes on foot as is the Dawson stop on the green line of the Luas. The Abbey Street stop of the red line of the Luas is a 20-minute walk away. There are two dublinbikes stations just outside the gallery, one at Clare Street and the other at Merrion Square West.

All galleries and entrances are wheelchair and buggy accessible and there are disabled parking spaces outside the Merrion Square entrance. Tours for the visually and hearing impaired are regularly organised. Visitors with guide dogs are welcome in the gallery. The lecture theatre, AV room and gallery shop are all fitted with a loop system for the hearing impaired.

Highlights

The collection has about 14,000 artworks, including about 2,500 oil paintings, 5,000 drawings, 5,000 prints, and some sculpture, furniture and other works of art.

Spanish

French

Italian

 
Caravaggio The Taking of Christ 1602

German and Swiss

  • Salzburg School Christ on the Cross with the Virgin Mary and John c.1430
  • Master of the Youth of St Romold (active c.1490) St Romold taking leave of his Parents c.1490
  • Georg Pencz (active 1500–50) Portrait of a Gentleman 1549
  • Angelica Kauffman (1741–1807) The Ely Family 1771
  • Emil Nolde (1867–1956) Two Women in a Garden 1915

Flemish

Dutch

 
Johannes Vermeer Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid c.1670

British and American

  • William Hogarth (1697–1764)
    • The Western Family c.1738
    • The Mackinen Children c.1747
  • Thomas Gainsborough 1727–88
    • A view in Suffolk c.1746
    • Mrs Christopher Horton (1743–1808) later Duchess of Cumberland 1766
    • The Cottage Girl 1785
  • Joshua Reynolds (1723–92)
    • Parody of Raphael's 'School of Athens' 1751
    • The Temple Family 1780–82
    • Omai 1776 (On loan from a private collection)
    • Charles Coote, The First Earl of Bellamont 1776
  • Henry Raeburn (1756–1823) Sir John and Lady Clerk of Penicuik 1791
  • George Romney (1734–1802) Titania, Puck and the Changeling, from Shakespeare's 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' 1793
  • John Singer Sargent (1856–1925) The Bead Stringers of Venice 1880–82
  • Stanley Royle (1888–1961) The Goose Girl c.1921
  • Francis Wheatley (1747–1801) The Dublin Volunteers on College Green, 4 November 1779 1779–80
  • Andrew Festing (1941–present)

Irish

 
The Marriage of Aoife and Strongbow (1854) by Daniel Maclise, a romanticised depiction of the marriage of Aoife MacMurrough in 1170
 
Augustus Nicholas Burke Connemara Girl

The Yeats Collection

  • Jack B. Yeats (1871–1957)
    • Bachelor's Walk, in Memory 1915 (On loan from a private collection)[6]
    • The Liffey Swim 1923
    • A Morning in a City 1937
    • Grief 1952
  • John Butler Yeats (1839–1922) John O'Leary 1904

Drawings and watercolours

Zurich Portrait Prize

Originally the Hennessy Portrait Prize, the Zurich Portrait Prize is an exhibition of commissioned artists creating works of portraiture. The Prize is open to artists in all mediums who are either citizens in Ireland or Irish citizens living abroad. The prize consists of €15,000 and a €5,000 commission to create a portrait that would be exhibited in the gallery.[7] Previous winners include

When it was the Hennessy Portrait Prize, the prize winners were

Library and archives collections

The library and archives collections at the National Gallery of Ireland encompass unique and historically significant collections for the study of art history. The origins of the collections can be traced back to the foundation of the institution over one hundred and sixty years ago. Covering the visual arts from the classical to the contemporary these collections continue to be a vital research element of the National Collection. The development of the library and archive has been supported principally through public funding and the private donations of generous benefactors.

Open to the public, it has particularly rich holdings relating to the history of western European art from the Middle Ages on, and the collections relating to Irish and Italian art are extensive. The collection amounts to over 100,000 published volumes, in addition to significant archival holdings.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d "History". National Gallery of Ireland. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  2. ^ "National Gallery of Ireland appoints first female director". The Irish Times. Retrieved 11 August 2022.
  3. ^ National Gallery of Ireland Act 1854 section 7.
  4. ^ a b Peter., Somerville-Large (2004). 1854-2004 : the story of the National Gallery Of Ireland. [Dublin]: National Gallery Of Ireland. ISBN 1904288081. OCLC 57429422.
  5. ^ "Reading the pictures". The Irish Times. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  6. ^ "Yeats Archive".
  7. ^ . National Gallery of Ireland. Archived from the original on 12 April 2019. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  8. ^ Dunne, Aidan. "Shortlist for national portrait prize to go on show at National Gallery of Ireland". The Irish Times. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  9. ^ "National Gallery of Ireland: Zurich Portrait Prize 2019". Retrieved 23 December 2019.
  10. ^ "Hennessy Portrait Prize 2017". Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  11. ^ "Hennessy Portrait Prize". Retrieved 26 December 2019.

Sources

Irish Statute Book
  • National Gallery of Ireland Act 1854
  • National Gallery of Ireland Act 1855
  • National Gallery (Amendment) Act 1865: see "Cap. LXXI: An Act to amend the Acts for the Establishment of a National Gallery in Dublin". Public General Statutes. Vol. 28 & 29 Vict. London: Eyre and Spottiswoode. 1865. pp. 307–310.
  • National Gallery of Ireland Act 1928
  • National Gallery of Ireland Act 1963
  • National Cultural Institutions Act 1997, Part VI
Secondary
  • Raymond Keaveney (2002), The National Gallery of Ireland: Essential Guide. London: Scala Publishers. ISBN 1-85759-267-0
  • Homan Potterton (2003), The National Gallery of Ireland in Brian Lalor (Ed.) The Encyclopedia of Ireland. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. ISBN 0-7171-3000-2
  • Homan Potterton, Introduction to National Gallery of Ireland: Illustrated Summary Catalogue of Paintings. Dublin: Gill & Macmillan. ISBN 0-7171-1145-8

External links

  • National Gallery of Ireland website
  • Reports of the Director of the National Gallery of Ireland 1883–1920 from EPPI (Enhanced British Parliamentary Papers on Ireland)

national, gallery, ireland, irish, gailearaí, náisiúnta, hÉireann, houses, national, collection, irish, european, located, centre, dublin, with, entrance, merrion, square, beside, leinster, house, another, clare, street, founded, 1854, opened, doors, years, la. The National Gallery of Ireland Irish Gailearai Naisiunta na hEireann houses the national collection of Irish and European art It is located in the centre of Dublin with one entrance on Merrion Square beside Leinster House and another on Clare Street It was founded in 1854 and opened its doors ten years later 1 The gallery has an extensive representative collection of Irish paintings and is also notable for its Italian Baroque and Dutch masters painting The current director is Caroline Campbell 2 National Gallery of IrelandGailearai Naisiunta na hEireannLocation within DublinEstablished1864 1864 LocationMerrion Square West Dublin IrelandCoordinates53 20 27 N 6 15 09 W 53 340914 N 6 252554 W 53 340914 6 252554 Coordinates 53 20 27 N 6 15 09 W 53 340914 N 6 252554 W 53 340914 6 252554TypeArt museumKey holdingsKitchen Maid with the Supper at EmmausPortrait of Dona Antonia ZarateThe Taking of ChristLady Writing a Letter with her MaidConnemara GirlDirectorCaroline CampbellPublic transit accessClare Street bus stop Dublin Pearse Dawson Street Green Line Websitewww wbr nationalgallery wbr ie Contents 1 History 1 1 List of directors 2 Millennium Wing 3 Master development plan 4 Location access and facilities 5 Highlights 5 1 Spanish 5 2 French 5 3 Italian 5 4 German and Swiss 5 5 Flemish 5 6 Dutch 5 7 British and American 5 8 Irish 5 9 The Yeats Collection 5 10 Drawings and watercolours 6 Zurich Portrait Prize 7 Library and archives collections 8 References 8 1 Citations 8 2 Sources 9 External linksHistory EditIn 1853 an exhibition the Great Industrial Exhibition was held on the lawns of Leinster House in Dublin Among the most popular exhibits was a substantial display of works of art organised and underwritten by the railway magnate William Dargan The enthusiasm of the visiting crowds demonstrated a public for art and it was decided to establish a permanent public art collection as a lasting monument of gratitude to Dargan The moving spirit behind the proposal was the barrister John Edward Pigot 1822 1871 son of David Richard Pigot Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer and he became one of the first governors of the gallery 3 The facade of the National Gallery copies the Natural History building of the National Museum of Ireland which was already planned for the facing flank of Leinster House The building itself was designed by Francis Fowke based on early plans by Charles Lanyon and was completed and opened in 1864 4 1 The gallery was not founded around an existing collection and when the gallery opened it had just 112 paintings 1 In 1866 an annual purchase grant was established and by 1891 space was already limited 4 In 1897 the Dowager Countess of Milltown indicated her intention of donating the contents of Russborough House to the gallery This gift included about 223 paintings 48 pieces of sculpture 33 engravings much silver furniture and a library and prompted construction from 1899 to 1903 of what is now called the Milltown Wing designed by Thomas Newenham Deane 1 5 At around this time Henry Vaughan left 31 watercolours by J M W Turner with the requirement that they could only be exhibited in January this to protect them from the ill effects of sunlight Though modern lighting technology has made this stipulation unnecessary the gallery continues to restrict viewing of the Vaughan bequest to January and the exhibition is treated as something of an occasion Another substantial bequest came with the untimely death in the sinking of the Lusitania of Hugh Lane 1875 1915 since 1914 director of the gallery not only did he leave a large collection of pictures he also left part of his residual estate and the Lane Fund has continued to contribute to the purchase of artworks to this day In addition to his involvement in the gallery Hugh Lane had also hoped to found a gallery of modern art something only realised after his death in the Hugh Lane Gallery George Bernard Shaw also made a substantial bequest leaving the gallery a third of royalties of his estate in gratitude for the time he spent there as a youth The gallery was again extended in 1962 with a new wing designed by Frank DuBerry of the Office of Public Works This opened in 1968 and is now named the Beit Wing In 1978 the gallery received from the government the paintings given to the nation by Chester Beatty and in 1987 the Sweeney bequest brought fourteen works of art including paintings by Picasso and Jack B Yeats The same year the gallery was once again given some of the contents of Russborough House when Alfred Beit donated 17 masterpieces including paintings by Velazquez Murillo Steen Vermeer and Raeburn In the 1990s a lost Caravaggio The Taking of Christ known through replicas was discovered hanging in a Jesuit house of studies in Leeson Street in Dublin by Sergio Benedetti senior conservator of the gallery The Jesuits have allowed this painting to be exhibited in the gallery and the discovery was the cause of national excitement The painting was on loan to an Italian gallery from February until July 2010 as part of Caravaggio s 400th anniversary In 1997 Anne Yeats donated sketchbooks by her uncle Jack Yeats and the gallery now includes a Yeats Museum Denis Mahon a well known art critic promised the gallery part of his rich collection and eight painting from his promised bequest are on permanent display including Jacob Blessing the Sons of Joseph by Guercino List of directors Edit George Mulvany 1861 69 Henry Doyle 1869 92 Walter Armstrong 1892 1914 Hugh Lane 1914 15 Walter G Strickland 1915 16 Robert Langton Douglas 1916 23 Lucius O Callaghan 1923 27 Thomas Bodkin 1927 35 George Furlong 1935 50 Thomas McGreevy 1950 63 James White 1964 80 Homan Potterton 1980 88 Raymond Keaveney 1988 2012 Sean Rainbird 2013 2022 Caroline Campbell 2022 to presentMillennium Wing Edit The Millennium Wing in March 2012 A new wing called the Millennium Wing was opened in 2002 Unlike the previous two extensions this new wing has street frontage and the English architects Benson amp Forsyth gave it an imposing Bowers Whitbed Portland Stone facade and grand atrium The design originally involved demolishing an adjoining Georgian terrace house and its ballroom mews however the Irish planning appeals authority An Bord Pleanala required that they be retained Master development plan Edit View of interior c 2013 In March 2011 the Office of Public Works OPW in association with the gallery commenced work on the historic complex at Merrion Square to address a critical need for the repair and renovation of the fabric of the Dargan 1864 and Milltown 1903 wings together with the provision of much needed additional accommodation The first phase of the works programme involved the removal and replacement of the Dargan Wing roof The next two phases of the project involved the replacement of the Milltown Wing roof followed by an extensive upgrade of the fabric and services of the two buildings whilst reclaiming their original period elegance Refurbishment of the two wings was completed in June 2017 Location access and facilities EditThe National Gallery of Ireland is located in the heart of Georgian Dublin There are two entrances one at Merrion Square and the other at Clare Street Admission to the gallery is free and many talks tours and events as well as the audioguide are also free of charge The gallery launched a free smartphone app in 2013 Dublin Bus routes 4 7 and 7a all pass by the gallery The Pearse Street DART station is 5 minutes on foot as is the Dawson stop on the green line of the Luas The Abbey Street stop of the red line of the Luas is a 20 minute walk away There are two dublinbikes stations just outside the gallery one at Clare Street and the other at Merrion Square West All galleries and entrances are wheelchair and buggy accessible and there are disabled parking spaces outside the Merrion Square entrance Tours for the visually and hearing impaired are regularly organised Visitors with guide dogs are welcome in the gallery The lecture theatre AV room and gallery shop are all fitted with a loop system for the hearing impaired Highlights EditThe collection has about 14 000 artworks including about 2 500 oil paintings 5 000 drawings 5 000 prints and some sculpture furniture and other works of art Domenico Ghirlandaio Presumed Portrait of Clarice Orsini Wife of Lorenzo the Magnificent before 1494 Andrea Mantegna Judith 1490s Workshop of Lucas Cranach the Elder Judith with the Head of Holofernes c 1550 Titian Ecce Homo 1558 60 Hendrick Avercamp Scene on the Ice c 1620 Rembrandt Interior with Figures 1628 Jan Brueghel the Younger and Peter Paul Rubens Christ in the House of Martha and Mary 1628 Paulus Moreelse Girl wearing a Gold Chain 1632 Rembrandt Portrait of a Woman with Gloves c 1632 1642 Frans Hals Fisher Boy c 1630 32 Dirck Hals A Woman Sewing by Candlelight 1633 Nicolas Poussin The Holy Family Sainte Famille c 1649 Jacob van Ruisdael Burg Bentheim 1653 Diego Velazquez La mulata La cena de Emaus before 1660 William Hogarth A Woman Swearing a Child to a Grave Citizen c 1729 Frederic William Burton The Meeting on the Turret Stairs 1864 Walter Osborne In a Dublin Park Light and Shade 1895Spanish Edit Luis de Morales c 1592 86 St Jerome in the Wilderness 1570s Jusepe de Ribera 1591 1652 St Onuphrius late 1620s Diego Velazquez 1599 1660 Kitchen Maid with the Supper of Emmaus c 1617 18 Francisco de Zurbaran 1598 1664 The Immaculate Conception early 1660s Bartolome Esteban Murillo 1617 82 The Return of the Prodigal Son c 1660 Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes 1746 1828 Dona Antonia Zarate c 1805 06 Pablo Ruiz Picasso 1881 1973 Still Life with Mandolin 1924 Juan Gris 1887 1927 Pierrot 1921French Edit Jacques Yverni flourished 1410 38 The Annunciation c 1435 Nicolas Poussin 1594 1665 Acis and Galatea 1627 28 The Lamentation over the Dead Christ 1657 60 Jean Lemaire 1598 1659 Architecture Landscape with Classical Figures 1627 30 Jean Baptiste Simeon Chardin 1699 1779 Still Life Two Rabbits a Grey Partridge Game Bag and Powder Flask 1731 Jean Honore Fragonard 1732 1806 Venus and Cupid Day c 1755 Eugene Delacroix 1798 1863 Demosthenes on the Seashore 1859 Gustave Courbet 1819 77 Portrait of Adolphe Marlet 1851 Alfred Sisley 1819 99 The Banks of the Canal du Loing at Saint Mammes 1888 Claude Monet 1840 1926 Argenteuil Basin with a Single Sailboat 1874 Paul Signac 1863 1935 Lady on the Terrace 1898 Kees van Dongen 1877 1968 Stella in a Flowered Hat c 1907 Chaim Soutine 1893 1943 Landscape with the Flight of Stairs c 1922Italian Edit Caravaggio The Taking of Christ 1602 Master of Verucchio 14th century The Crucifixion Noli me tangere c 1330 40 Fra Angelico 1417 55 Sts Cosmas and Damian and their Brothers surviving the Stake c 1440 42 Zanobi Strozzi attribute to 1412 68 Assumption of the Virgin with Sts Jerome and Francis 1460s Filippino Lippi 1457 1504 Portrait of a Musician late 1480s Titian c 1485 90 1576 Ecce Homo c 1558 60 Giovan Battista Moroni before 1524 1578 Portrait of a Gentleman and his two Children c 1570 Caravaggio 1571 1610 The Taking of Christ 1602 Guido Reni 1575 1624 The Suicide of Cleopatra c 1639 40 Domenichino 1581 1641 Saint Mary Magdalene c 1625 Guercino 1591 1666 Jacob blessing the Sons of Jacob c 1620 Sassoferrato 1609 85 Virgin and Child 1630s Luca Giordano 1634 1705 Venus Mars and the Forge of Vulcan 1660s Carlo Maratta 1625 1713 The Rape of Europa c 1680 1685 Francesco Solimena 1657 1747 Allegory of Winter c 1690 Canaletto 1697 1768 St Mark s Square c 1756 Ugolino di Nerio early 14th Century Prophet Isaiah Paolo Uccello 1397 1475 Virgin and ChildGerman and Swiss Edit Salzburg School Christ on the Cross with the Virgin Mary and John c 1430 Master of the Youth of St Romold active c 1490 St Romold taking leave of his Parents c 1490 Georg Pencz active 1500 50 Portrait of a Gentleman 1549 Angelica Kauffman 1741 1807 The Ely Family 1771 Emil Nolde 1867 1956 Two Women in a Garden 1915Flemish Edit Pieter Brueghel the Younger 1564 c 1637 Peasant Wedding 1620 Peter Paul Rubens 1577 1640 St Peter finding the Tribute Money 1617 18 Jacob Jordaens 1593 1678 The Veneration of the Eucharist c 1630 The Supper at Emmaus c 1645 65 Anthony van Dyck 1599 1641 A Boy standing on a Terrace c 1623 24Dutch Edit Johannes Vermeer Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid c 1670 Marinus van Reymerswaele attributed c 1490 95 c 1567 The Calling of Matthew c 1530 40 Gerrit van Honthorst 1590 1656 A Musical Party c 1616 18 Rembrandt and studio 1606 69 La Main Chaude c 1628 Willem Cornelisz Duyster 1599 1635 Interior with Soldiers 1632 Aelbert Cuyp 1620 91 Milking Cows 1640s Matthias Stomer 1600 after 1650 The Arrest of Christ c 1641 Rembrandt 1606 69 Landscape with the Rest on the Flight into Egypt 1647 Willem Drost 1652 80 Bust of a Man Wearing a Large brimmed Hat c 1654 Anthonie de Lorme 1610 73 Interior of St Laurenskerk Rotterdam c 1660 65 Gabriel Metsu 1629 67 Man Writing a Letter c 1663 Woman Reading a Letter c 1663 Jan Steen 1625 26 79 The Village School c 1665 The Marriage Feast at Cana 1665 70 Johannes Vermeer 1632 75 Lady Writing a Letter with her Maid c 1670 Cornelis Troost 1696 1750 Jeronimus Tonneman and his son Jeronimus 1736 Nicolaes de Giselaer Interior with Figures Emanuel de Witte Church Interior Frans Hals Fisher boy with basketBritish and American Edit William Hogarth 1697 1764 The Western Family c 1738 The Mackinen Children c 1747 Thomas Gainsborough 1727 88 A view in Suffolk c 1746 Mrs Christopher Horton 1743 1808 later Duchess of Cumberland 1766 The Cottage Girl 1785 Joshua Reynolds 1723 92 Parody of Raphael s School of Athens 1751 The Temple Family 1780 82 Omai 1776 On loan from a private collection Charles Coote The First Earl of Bellamont 1776 Henry Raeburn 1756 1823 Sir John and Lady Clerk of Penicuik 1791 George Romney 1734 1802 Titania Puck and the Changeling from Shakespeare s A Midsummer Night s Dream 1793 John Singer Sargent 1856 1925 The Bead Stringers of Venice 1880 82 Stanley Royle 1888 1961 The Goose Girl c 1921 Francis Wheatley 1747 1801 The Dublin Volunteers on College Green 4 November 1779 1779 80 Andrew Festing 1941 present Irish Edit The Marriage of Aoife and Strongbow 1854 by Daniel Maclise a romanticised depiction of the marriage of Aoife MacMurrough in 1170 Augustus Nicholas Burke Connemara Girl Kevin Abosch photographer 1969 Portrait of Brian O Driscoll 2011 James Barry 1741 1806 The Temptation of Adam 1767 70 Self portrait as Timanths c 1780 1803 The Death of Adonis Augustus Nicholas Burke 1838 1891 Connemara Girl 1865 Nathaniel Hone the Elder 1718 84 The Conjurer 1775 Hugh Douglas Hamilton 1740 1808 Frederick Hervey Bishop of Derry and Fourth Earl of Bristol 1730 1803 with his Granddaughter Lady Caroline Crichton 1779 1856 in the Gardens of the Villa Borghese Rome c 1790 Francis Danby 1793 1861 The Opening of the Sixth Seal 1828 Daniel Maclise 1806 1870 The Marriage of Strongbow and Aoife 1854 Sarah Purser 1848 1943 Le Petit Dejeuner 1881 Roderic O Conor 1860 1940 Le Jeune Bretonne c 1895 Walter Osborne 1859 1903 Dublin Streets a Vendor of Books 1889 In a Dublin Park Light and Shade c 1895 John Lavery 1856 1941 The Artist s Studio Lady Hazel Lavery with her Daughter Alice and Step Daughter Eileen 1909 13 Paul Henry 1876 1958 Launching the Currach 1910 11 William John Leech 1881 1968 Convent Garden Brittany c 1912 Sean Keating 1889 1977 An Allegory c 1922 Mainie Jellett 1897 1944 Decoration 1923 Gerard Dillon 1916 1971 The Little Green Fields c 1945 Louis le Brocquy 1916 2012 A Family 1951 William Orpen 1878 1931 Portrait of John Count McCormack 1923The Yeats Collection Edit Jack B Yeats 1871 1957 Bachelor s Walk in Memory 1915 On loan from a private collection 6 The Liffey Swim 1923 A Morning in a City 1937 Grief 1952 John Butler Yeats 1839 1922 John O Leary 1904Drawings and watercolours Edit James Malton 1760 1803 The Custom House Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775 1851 A Ship against the Mewstone at the Entrance to Plymouth Sound Fishing Boats on Folkestone Beach Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1828 82 Jane Burden as Queen Guinevere 1858 Frederick William Burton 1816 1900 Hellelil and Hildebrand the Meeting on Turret Stairs 1864 1864 James Abbott McNeill Whistler 1834 1903 Nocturne in Grey and Gold Piccadilly 1881 83 Edgar Degas 1834 1917 Two Ballet Dancers in a Dressing Room Pablo Ruiz Picasso 1881 1973 Two Dancers 1925Zurich Portrait Prize EditOriginally the Hennessy Portrait Prize the Zurich Portrait Prize is an exhibition of commissioned artists creating works of portraiture The Prize is open to artists in all mediums who are either citizens in Ireland or Irish citizens living abroad The prize consists of 15 000 and a 5 000 commission to create a portrait that would be exhibited in the gallery 7 Previous winners include 2018 Mandy O Neill 8 2019 Enda Bowe 9 When it was the Hennessy Portrait Prize the prize winners were 2017 Jack Hickey 10 2016 Gerry Davis 2015 Vera Klute 2014 Nick Miller 11 Library and archives collections EditThe library and archives collections at the National Gallery of Ireland encompass unique and historically significant collections for the study of art history The origins of the collections can be traced back to the foundation of the institution over one hundred and sixty years ago Covering the visual arts from the classical to the contemporary these collections continue to be a vital research element of the National Collection The development of the library and archive has been supported principally through public funding and the private donations of generous benefactors Open to the public it has particularly rich holdings relating to the history of western European art from the Middle Ages on and the collections relating to Irish and Italian art are extensive The collection amounts to over 100 000 published volumes in addition to significant archival holdings References EditCitations Edit a b c d History National Gallery of Ireland Retrieved 21 August 2018 National Gallery of Ireland appoints first female director The Irish Times Retrieved 11 August 2022 National Gallery of Ireland Act 1854 section 7 a b Peter Somerville Large 2004 1854 2004 the story of the National Gallery Of Ireland Dublin National Gallery Of Ireland ISBN 1904288081 OCLC 57429422 Reading the pictures The Irish Times Retrieved 21 August 2018 Yeats Archive The Zurich Portrait Prize National Gallery of Ireland Archived from the original on 12 April 2019 Retrieved 12 April 2019 Dunne Aidan Shortlist for national portrait prize to go on show at National Gallery of Ireland The Irish Times Retrieved 12 April 2019 National Gallery of Ireland Zurich Portrait Prize 2019 Retrieved 23 December 2019 Hennessy Portrait Prize 2017 Retrieved 26 December 2019 Hennessy Portrait Prize Retrieved 26 December 2019 Sources Edit Irish Statute BookNational Gallery of Ireland Act 1854 National Gallery of Ireland Act 1855 National Gallery Amendment Act 1865 see Cap LXXI An Act to amend the Acts for the Establishment of a National Gallery in Dublin Public General Statutes Vol 28 amp 29 Vict London Eyre and Spottiswoode 1865 pp 307 310 National Gallery of Ireland Act 1928 National Gallery of Ireland Act 1963 National Cultural Institutions Act 1997 Part VISecondaryRaymond Keaveney 2002 The National Gallery of Ireland Essential Guide London Scala Publishers ISBN 1 85759 267 0 Homan Potterton 2003 The National Gallery of Ireland in Brian Lalor Ed The Encyclopedia of Ireland Dublin Gill amp Macmillan ISBN 0 7171 3000 2 Homan Potterton Introduction to National Gallery of Ireland Illustrated Summary Catalogue of Paintings Dublin Gill amp Macmillan ISBN 0 7171 1145 8External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to National Gallery of Ireland National Gallery of Ireland website The Millennium Wing on Irish architecture com Reports of the Director of the National Gallery of Ireland 1883 1920 from EPPI Enhanced British Parliamentary Papers on Ireland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Gallery of Ireland amp oldid 1122414052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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