Irish Art Masterpieces

Irish Art Masterpieces
Author: Catherine Marshall
Publisher:
Total Pages: 128
Release: 1994
Genre: Art
ISBN:

A brief history of Irish art masterpieces offers many fine illustrations.

Brendan Behan's Island

Brendan Behan's Island
Author: Brendan Behan
Publisher: Little Brown
Total Pages: 200
Release: 1962
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

From the snug of the 'Shaky Man' (probably the nearest pub to Guinness Brewery in Dublin) Brendan Behan take us on a tour of his native country. Not very much topographical information is imparted perhaps and even the Georgian architecture for which Dublin is deservedly famous is scarcely mentioned: 'Good architecture, ' Mr. Behan reports as architect friend as saying 'is invisible.' Mr Behan is less interested in things than in people and a galaxy of characters and stories about the inhabitants of that Augustan city cross his pages. But Brendan has been outside Dublin from time to time as London, Paris, Berlin, New York, Montreal, San Francisco and Mexico City can well witness. His investigations among the aborigines of those famed cities are not his concern in this book, however: those anthropological investigations must await another occasion for the telling. Here he regales us with his views on Dublin, the North of Ireland, Galway and the Aran Islands and the counties of the south - always with an eye on the people and their habits rather than on the places themselves. He was accompanied on many expeditions by Paul Hogarth, whose drawings complement the spirit of the text as no other artist's could have done. Intellectuality stimulating, Mr. Behan discourses on the evils of drinking potheen, the mores of Limerick girls, storytellers in the last bastion of Gaelic culture on the Aran Islands, the Irish middle-classes and what he calls 'the Anglo-Irish Horse-Protestants.' Enlivened with song, poem, story, and Paul Hogarth's drawings, this book tells a lot about Ireland but tells us even more about that fascinating human Behan.

The Irish

The Irish
Author: Leslie Carola
Publisher: Hugh Lauter Levin Assc
Total Pages: 384
Release: 1995-03-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780883637012

An Urban Sketcher's Galway

An Urban Sketcher's Galway
Author: Roisin Cure
Publisher: Columba Press (IE)
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2019-07-17
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781782189084

Galway artist Roisin Cure presents snapshots of life in the City of the Tribes in bold ink and vibrant watercolor. Her sketches show the beautiful details of Galway's pubs, the musicians and buskers, the exquisite medieval stonework, the marine environment, the vibrant nightlife culture, and the local colorful characters. These striking pictures are accompanied by recollections of conversations the artist had while sketching. This book is a unique souvenir of Galway, of a city that is famous for the arts and yet has so little in the way of visual art. It is a very timely book, released in advance of Galway 2020, when the city celebrates being European Capital of Culture.

The Irish Sketchbook of 1842

The Irish Sketchbook of 1842
Author: William Makepeace Thackeray
Publisher: Nonsuch Publishing, Limited
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2005
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN:

Primarily a travel diary, Thackeray had a keen eye for humour, and a turn of phrase that will attract many. The undertones (and blatant overtones at times) of superiority and anti-popery (Anti-Catholicism) never threaten to undo the humour and quality of the observations. Travelling from Dublin through Kildare, Wicklow, Cork, Galway, Killarney and many more locations and back once more to Dublin, this book paints an intimate and enjoyable portrait of Ireland, in the 1840's prior to the Famine, and from the perspective of a witty and acerbic British Journalist. William Makepeace Thackeray was born in India 1811, and is best know for "Vanity Fair," a novel that investigates and reflects the society of early 19th century Britain. More importantly for this publication, Thackeray was regular contributor to Fraser's Magazine, "Morning Chronicle," "New Monthly Magazine" and "The Times and Punch." These Punch sketches reappeared in 1848 as "The Book Of Snobs," a satirical sketch of snobbery and snobs in England. He toured Ireland in 1842, and the resulting sketchbook is republished now by Nonsuch Publishing.

50 Works of Irish Art You Need to Know

50 Works of Irish Art You Need to Know
Author: Síghle Bhreathnach-Lynch
Publisher: Gill Books
Total Pages: 144
Release: 2015
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780717166558

Ireland's incredible artistic heritage is celebrated in this entertaining, enlightening book. From the Newgrange kerbstone to Francis Bacon's studio, Bhreathnach-Lynch takes us through a history of Irish art in 50 works, celebrating each along the way.