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It is located in central Dublin and has 3,600 square feet of gallery space spread over two floors. [4] In 2015, the Artnet website included the gallery in a list of "Europe’s Top 55 Galleries". [5] David Fitzgerald, Darragh Hogan, and John Kennedy are the gallery's directors. [6]
Pages in category "Painters from Dublin (city)" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. B. James Brenan;
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.
[15] [16] This was part of a wider plan to rejuvenate a neglected and deprived area of Dublin city spanning 270 acres between Collins Barracks and O'Connell Street. This area was designated as part of the Historic Area Rejuvenation Project (HARP), with the museum being the central piece of a new "museum quarter".
Seán Keating (born John Keating, 28 September 1889 – 21 December 1977) was an Irish romantic-realist painter who painted some iconic images of the Irish War of Independence and of the early industrialization of Ireland.
Taylor Galleries exhibits and sells contemporary and twentieth-century painting, sculpture, print and works on paper by select artists, mostly Irish, who are represented by the gallery. Throughout the year it mounts a series of solo exhibitions by gallery artists and two large group shows, one in summer and one in winter, which often include ...
1966 New Zealand Painting 1966 (toured) Auckland City Art Gallery [16] 1966 The Group Durham Street Gallery, Christchurch [17] 1967 10 Years of New Zealand Painting in Auckland, 1958–1967 Auckland City Art Gallery [18] 1970 Contemporary Painting in New Zealand (toured) Smithsonian Institution, Washington [19]
The model for the painting was Sutton’s teaching colleague Tom Taylor. [18] Homage to Frances Hodgkins 1951. [19] When the Christchurch City Council declined to purchase Frances Hodgkins’ Pleasure Garden, [20] Sutton responded with a painting based on Homage to Cezanne (1900) by the French painter Maurice Denis.