Category Archives: harry clarke

Evie Hone

Eva Sydney Hone – better known as Evie – was born at Roebuck Grove, Clonskeagh, Dublin on 22 April 1894. She was the youngest of four daughters of Joseph Hone, a director of the Bank of Ireland, and Eva Hone (née Robinson), who sadly died only two days after Evie’s birth. Roebuck Grove is now known as the University Lodge since the property was bought by University College Dublin (UCD). She was related to the noted 18th century Irish artist Nathaniel Hone.

Evie Hone

She was educated at home, but after contracting poliomyelitis at the age of twelve she was sent to Switzerland for specialist treatment. Although her condition improved it was not a total recovery and she was a semi-invalid for the rest of her life. It is all the more amazing that she overcame this restriction to become a painter and later a successful and internationally recognised stained-glass artist.  In 1913 she went to London and studied at the Byam Shaw School of Art and the Central School of Arts and Crafts under Bernard Meninsky. In London she became friends with Mainie Jellet, before they went to France and studied with cubist painter Albert Gleize, making them pioneers of the modern movement in Irish painting.

She returned to Dublin and lived in Lucan, and by the early 1930s she had become interested in stained-glass. In 1933 she joined An Túr Gloine, and one of her first pieces was ‘The Annunciation’, in Taney church, Dundrum, Co. Dublin. Her work was well received and in 1939 she was commissioned to produce a piece, My four green fields, for the New York World Fair which won first prize. It is now in Government Buildings in Dublin. Another piece that brought international recognition was her east window in Eton College chapel, Windsor. It was completed in 1952, covers over 900 square feet and comprises more than 40,000 pieces of glass.

My four green fields

In 1954 was elected an honorary member of the RHA. She died 13 March 1955 while entering her parish church at Rathfarnham.

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Filed under Art, Dublin, harry clarke, Ireland

The Little Museum of Dublin

It may indeed be little but the museum is big on the history of Dublin, with many pictures, drawings and artifacts bringing the story to life. Our tour guide, Trevor, was engaging with those in the group, as he pointed to various items in the collection before telling of their background, and often with a humorous tale to add to its importance.

The museum is ten years old, and many of the exhibits have been donated by Dubliners who wished for them to be seen in such a place. These treasured items – movie posters, road signs, a milk bottle from the 1988 one thousandth year celebration of Dublin’s beginning, and many more – have now found a fine home, and they help ‘flesh out’ the city’s history in a way that is accessible, and fun.

Harry Clarke’s glass is class!

We found out about the history of St Stephen’s Green, its development, and the part it played in the Easter Rising. After a few questions from various group members I was amazed to find out that during the fighting in and around The Green there was a one-hour ceasefire each day during hostilities. What for, we thought, only to find out that the time was used by Park Rangers to feed the local ducks! That, not surprisingly, got a warm response, as did many of the other stories we heard.

There are signed papers by Eamon de Valera, Countess Markievicz and a beautiful piece of stained-glass by Harry Clarke, that shimmered in the sunlight. I noted a key to The Green that a resident would have owned, before the place was bought by Lord Ardilaun (Sir Arthur Guinness) and opened to the public on the 27th July 1880.

You can see photographs of Dublin from over the years, and of many of its native sons and daughters and their contribution to the world of arts, sports and beyond.

It’s a must see.

On your bike!

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Filed under Architecture, Art, Dublin, flann o'brien, harry clarke, History, James Joyce

Limerick-a-Day: No. 46 ‘Bye-bye Bewley’s’

A little piece, written in response to the news of the looming closure of Bewley’s Café – one of Dublin’s favourite places

A place of great memories...and aromas!

A place of great memories…and aromas!


The closure of Bewley’s, just fills me with dread
Yet more unravelling, of the city’s fine thread
Harry’s panes won’t shine
Oh how I pine
For coffee and scones, in those high seats so red

Don Cameron 2020

Harry Clarke's wonderful windows

Harry Clarke’s wonderful windows

 

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Filed under Art, Dublin, harry clarke, History