Illustrated Summary Catalogue of Drawings, Watercolours, and Miniatures
Title | Illustrated Summary Catalogue of Drawings, Watercolours, and Miniatures PDF eBook |
Author | National Gallery of Ireland |
Publisher | Paul Holberton Publishing |
Pages | 886 |
Release | 1983 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN |
This Catalogue publishes for the first time the complete collection of drawings, watercolours and miniatures in the National Gallery of Ireland. Over 5,000 items are described and illustrated. In cases where there is a design on the verso of a sheet this, too, is illustrated and a representative example shown from sketchbooks and albums. Comprehensive appendices index the Collection under subject matter and provenance and the introduction relates the history of the Collection and descrives some of the most important items.
Paul Henry
Title | Paul Henry PDF eBook |
Author | S. B. Kennedy |
Publisher | Yale University Press |
Pages | 172 |
Release | 2003-01-01 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN | 9780300099454 |
This is a biography of Henry's life & artistic achievements, especially his idyllic landscape paintings of the west of Ireland.
John Singer Sargent
Title | John Singer Sargent PDF eBook |
Author | Richard Ormond |
Publisher | Paul Mellon Centre |
Pages | 276 |
Release | 1998 |
Genre | Art |
ISBN |
"From 1874 to 1882, John Singer Sargent (1856-1925) produced more than 200 paintings and water-colours aside from portraiture that chart his development as an artist. The breadth of his achievement includes figures in landscape settings, architectural studies, seascapes, subject paintings, and studies after old masters. From his powerful studies of models in Paris in the mid-1870s to his compelling paintings set in Venice in the early 1880s, the works published in this volume of the catalogue raisonne show the variety of his aesthetic responses." "Working in the studio and en plein air, Sargent travelled widely during the eight years covered in this volume, painting in Paris, Brittany, Capri, Spain, North Africa and Venice." "This is the first time that Sargent's early work has been mapped so comprehensively. With very few exceptions, this book illustrates all the pictures under discussion in colour. Each painting, including several which have never been published before, is documented in depth with full provenance, exhibition history and bibliography. Original research of primary documents and on-site investigations uncovered much new information, presented in critical discussions of subject matter, dating, style, and significance in the artist's career. The volume reproduces a wealth of Sargent's preliminary and related drawings and of comparative works by other artists." --Book Jacket.
Representations of Swift
Title | Representations of Swift PDF eBook |
Author | Brian A. Connery |
Publisher | University of Delaware Press |
Pages | 320 |
Release | 2002 |
Genre | Literary Collections |
ISBN | 9780874137972 |
These thirteen essays offer not only the representations of Swift to which its title refers but also a representation of Swift scholarship at the close of the twentieth century and a return to fundamental questions about the life, writing, and views of Swift, issues raised in part by literary scholarship's return to historicism but also powerfully suggestive of a return to biography.
Sources in Irish Art
Title | Sources in Irish Art PDF eBook |
Author | Fintan Cullen |
Publisher | Cork University Press |
Pages | 342 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 9781859181546 |
"The publication of these texts in a single volume enables the reader to create useful historical comparisons as well as facilitating the careful examination of historical documents. Sources in Irish Art: A Reader will be an ideal text for Irish Studies and relevant Art History courses both at undergraduate and postgraduate levels."--BOOK JACKET.
1854-2004
Title | 1854-2004 PDF eBook |
Author | Peter Somerville-Large |
Publisher | University of Washington Press |
Pages | 488 |
Release | 2004 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN |
The National Gallery of Ireland was founded in 1854 and has since acquired an extraordinary collection of masterpieces by artists such as Caravaggio, Lanfranco, Poussin, Rubens, Uccello, Velázquez, and Vermeer, as well as British artists such as Gainsborough and Reynolds and the leading lights of Irish art, from James Barry to Jack Yeats. The Gallery has expanded steadily, benefiting from the royalties to the works of George Bernard Shaw and from numerous generous donations by figures such as Lane, Milltown, Beit, Mahon, and Chester Beatty. The story of the Gallery, with all its tribulations and struggles, good and bad luck, good and bad judgement, all its personalities, is told for the first time. It displays the breadth and depth of the collection, but it also reveals much about the rebirth of a nation and changing attitudes to art over time.
Who Do I Think I Am?
Title | Who Do I Think I Am? PDF eBook |
Author | Homan Potterton |
Publisher | Merrion Press |
Pages | 354 |
Release | 2017-11-03 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | 1785371487 |
When Homan Potterton was appointed Director of the National Gallery of Ireland in 1979 at the age of thirty-three, he was the youngest ever Director since the foundation of the Gallery in 1854. Who Do I Think I Am? is the sequel to the author’s best-selling childhood memoir Rathcormick: A Childhood Recalled. Written in a witty and amusing style, Homan Potterton regales the reader with tales of student days at Trinity, Dublin, summer jobs in London, carefree travel in Europe, and his unexpected journey to the director’s office of the National Gallery of Ireland, after his first museum job in the National Gallery, London. With a keen interest in people, an observant eye and a spry humour, Potterton describes the many characters and leading lights of Dublin and London society that he encountered during his rich and varied career, including Anthony Blunt, Michael Levey, Denis Mahon, Derek Hill, James White, Desmond Guinness and Charles Haughey. Befriending Sir Alfred and Clementine Beit, he helped secure the famous Beit Collection for the Irish nation, and, in a dramatic episode, describes how he worked with Gardaí to recover the Beit paintings stolen from Russborough House by Martin Cahill in 1986. In a shock resignation, Potterton left the National Gallery of Ireland after only eight years. Thirty years on, Who Do I Think I Am? is his charming and candid memoir; a beautifully rendered, acutely descriptive impression of the art worlds of Dublin and London in the years 1970–1990.