National Gallery of Ireland
The National Gallery of Ireland 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. 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.
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 appreciation 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, son of David Richard Pigot, Chief Baron of the Irish Exchequer, and he became one of the first governors of the gallery. 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.The gallery was not founded around an existing collection, and when the gallery opened it had just 112 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 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.
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 of Hugh Lane, 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
- George Mulvany, 1861–1869
- Henry Doyle, 1869–1892
- Walter Armstrong, 1892–1914
- Hugh Lane, 1914–15
- Walter G. Strickland, 1915–16
- Robert Langton Douglas, 1916–1923
- Lucius O'Callaghan, 1923–1927
- Thomas Bodkin, 1927–1935
- George Furlong, 1935–1950
- Thomas McGreevy, 1950–1963
- James White, 1964–1980
- Homan Potterton, 1980–1988
- Raymond Keaveney, 1988–2012
- Sean Rainbird, 2013–2022
- Caroline Campbell 2022–to present
Millennium Wing
Master development plan
In March 2011, the Office of Public Works, 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 and Milltown 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
- Luis de Morales St Jerome in the Wilderness 1570s
- Jusepe de Ribera St Onuphrius late 1620s
- Diego Velázquez Kitchen Maid with the Supper of Emmaus, c.1617–18
- Francisco de Zurbarán The Immaculate Conception early 1660s
- Bartolomé Esteban Murillo The Return of the Prodigal Son c.1660
- Francisco José de Goya y Lucientes Dona Antonia Zarate c.1805–06
- Pablo Ruiz Picasso Still-Life with Mandolin 1924
- Juan Gris Pierrot 1921
French
- Jacques Yverni The Annunciation c.1435
- Nicolas Poussin
- * Acis and Galatea 1627–28
- * The Lamentation over the Dead Christ 1657–60
- Jean Lemaire Architecture Landscape with Classical Figures 1627–30
- Jean-Baptiste-Siméon Chardin Still Life: Two Rabbits, a Grey Partridge, Game Bag and Powder Flask 1731
- Jean-Honoré Fragonard Venus and Cupid c.1755
- Eugène Delacroix Demosthenes on the Seashore 1859
- Gustave Courbet Portrait of Adolphe Marlet 1851
- Alfred Sisley The Banks of the Canal du Loing at Saint-Mammes 1888
- Claude Monet Argenteuil Basin with a Single Sailboat 1874
- Paul Signac Lady on the Terrace 1898
- Kees van Dongen Stella in a Flowered Hat c.1907
- Chaïm Soutine Landscape with the Flight of Stairs c.1922
Italian
- Master of Verucchio The Crucifixion, Noli me tangere c.1330–40
- Fra Angelico Sts Cosmas and Damian and their Brothers surviving the Stake c.1440–42
- Zanobi Strozzi Assumption of the Virgin with Sts Jerome and Francis 1460s
- Filippino Lippi Portrait of a Musician late 1480s
- Titian Ecce Homo c.1558/60
- Giovan Battista Moroni Portrait of a Gentleman and his two Children c.1570
- Caravaggio The Taking of Christ 1602
- Guido Reni The Suicide of Cleopatra c.1639–40
- Domenichino Saint Mary Magdalene c.1625
- Guercino Jacob blessing the Sons of Jacob c.1620
- Sassoferrato Virgin and Child 1630s
- Luca Giordano Venus, Mars and the Forge of Vulcan 1660s
- Carlo Maratta The Rape of Europa c. 1680–1685
- Francesco Solimena Allegory of Winter c.1690
- Canaletto St. Mark's Square c.1756
- Ugolino di Nerio Prophet Isaiah
- Paolo Uccello ''Virgin and Child''
German and Swiss
- Salzburg School Christ on the Cross with the Virgin Mary and John c.1430
- Master of the Youth of St Romold St Romold taking leave of his Parents c.1490
- Georg Pencz Portrait of a Gentleman 1549
- Angelica Kauffman The Ely Family 1771
- Emil Nolde Two Women in a Garden 1915