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National Gallery Of Ireland




European art. It is located in the centre of Dublin city 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. The Gallery has an extensive, representative collection of Irish painting and is also notable for its Italian Baroque and Dutch masters painting. The current director of the gallery is Raymond Keaveney. Entry to the gallery is free.


HISTORY


In 1853 an exhibition, the Irish 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 organized 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 facade of the National Gallery mimics 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 in 1864.

The Gallery was unlucky not to have been founded around an existing collection, but through diligent and skillful purchase, by
the time it opened it had 125 paintings, in 1866 an annual purchase
grant was established and by 1891 space was already limited. In 1897 the Dowager Countess of
Milltown indicated her intention of donating the contents of Russborough House to the
Gallery. This gift included about 200 hundred paintings and prompted construction from 1899
to 1903 of what is now called the Milltown Wing. This was designed by Thomas Newenham Deane.

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 art works to this day. In
addition to his involvement in the Gallery, Hugh Lane has also hoped to found a gallery
of modern art, something only realised after his death in the Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery . George Bernard Shaw also made a substantial bequest, he left 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 du Barry 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 14 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; the Beit donation of 17 masterpieces, including painting 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. The
Jesuits have generously allowed this painting to be exhibited in the Gallery and the discovery was the cause of national excitement. 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 the magnificent ''Jacob Blessing the Sons of Joseph'' by Guercino .

A new wing, the Millennium Wing, was opened in 2002. Unlike the previous two extensions,
this new wing has street frontage and the architects Benson and Forsyth gave it an imposing facade and grand atrium. The design originally involved demolishing an adjoining Georgian terrace house and its ballroom mews; however, the planning authority, An Bord Pleanála , required that they be retained and in fact they give depth and texture to the design. The Millennium Wing is not without its critics: it is unforgiving of poor maintenance and its circulation space lacks clarity, but it is generally considered that these flaws are trivial details set against the drama of the building.


HIGHLIGHTS OF THE COLLECTION


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


Spanish



French



Italian




German and Netherlandish



Flemish



Dutch


  • 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 Stom (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) ''Woman writing a Letter, with her Maid'' c.1670

  • Cornelis Troost (1696-1750) ''Jeronimus Tonneman and his son Jeronimus'' 1736



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, 4th November 1779'' 1779-80



Irish

  • James Barry (1741-1806)

  • ---''The Temptation of Adam'' 1767-70

  • ---''Self-portrait as Timanths'' c.1780-1803

  • 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 Fredrick Osborne (1859-1903) ''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



The Yeats Collection

  • Jack B. Yeats (1871-1957)

  • --- ''The Liffey Swim'' 1923

  • --- ''A Morning in a City'' 1937

  • --- ''Grief'' 1951

  • John Butler Yeats (1839-1922) ''John O'Leary'' 1904



Drawings and Watercolours



SEE ALSO



External links



References

  • Raymond Keaveney (2002), ''The National Gallery of Ireland: Essential Guide''. London: Scala Publishers. ISBN 1857592670

  • Homan Potterton (2003), ''The National Gallery of Ireland'' in Brian Lalor (Ed.) '' The Encyclopedia Of Ireland ''. Dublin: Gill and Macmillian. ISBN 0-7171-3000-2