Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 .
Director of the National Gallery of Ireland Caroline Campbell (born Belfast ) is an international art museum curator. Since November 2022, she is director of the National Gallery of Ireland , being the first woman taking this position in the Gallery’s 158 year history.
It was painted in London, where Burton later became Director of the National Gallery. The painting is housed in the National Gallery of Ireland. It was voted by the Irish public as Ireland's favourite painting in 2012 from among 10 works shortlisted by critics. [1]
Douglas Hyde Gallery; Hugh Lane Municipal Gallery; Irish Museum of Modern Art (IMMA) Kerlin Gallery; Molesworth Gallery; National Gallery of Ireland; Olivier Cornet Gallery; Oriel Gallery; Pallas Projects/Studios; Project Arts Centre; Royal Hibernian Academy (RHA) Taylor Galleries; Temple Bar Gallery and Studios
Burton's best-known watercolours, The Aran Fisherman's Drowned Child (1841) and The Meeting on the Turret Stairs (1864; also known as Hellelil and Hildebrand) are in the National Gallery of Ireland. Meeting on the Turret Stairs was voted by the Irish public as Ireland's favourite painting in 2012 from among 10 works shortlisted by critics. [1]
Daphne Wright (born 1963) is an Irish visual artist, who makes sculptural installations using a variety of techniques and media to explore how a range of languages and materials can be used to probe unspoken human preoccupations. [1]
In a Dublin Park, Light and Shade is an oil on canvas painting by the Irish artist Walter Osborne, completed c. 1895, and housed in the National Gallery of Ireland. The work is renowned for both its harrowing depiction of Dublin's poor at the turn of the 20th century, and its detailing of the effects of light and shadow, and evidences the ...
National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin Judith with the Head of Holofernes is a c. 1495 glue tempera on canvas painting by Andrea Mantegna , now in the National Gallery of Ireland in Dublin . [ 1 ]