The National Self-Portrait Collection of Ireland is a collection of more than 400 self-portraits of Irish artists which is housed in the Kneafsey Gallery at the University of Limerick.
The origins of the collection can be found in the purchase of fifteen self-portraits from the collection of the late John Kneafsey by the university in 1977. [1] Kneafsey worked as office manager for the Irish Independent newspaper and was a former Chair of the Limerick Art Society, a patron and collector of art. [2]
In 1982 the university appointed a board of trustees tasked with establishing and maintaining a national collection which would reflect a broad spectrum of the visual arts across the island. In addition to creating a national reference collection, the process aims to formally recognise the contributions made by Irish artists in their own lifetime. The first Board of Trustees consisted of the Director of the National Gallery of Ireland, the Keeper of Art at the Royal Hibernian Academy and the Director of the Arts Council, overseen by the President of the Institution. Each year the Board invite a small number of distinguished artists to add their portraits to the collection for a nominal fee. Additional works of deceased artists are also purchased. The Trustees intended to publish a volume of works every decade to record the growth of the collection. [1] The board of trustees has at various times included art-historians and critics from across the island. The fee paid to artists has risen over time and in 1997 stood at £250 to cover the cost of materials. [3]
The Kneafsey Gallery was officially opened on 6 March 1982, with the inaugural exhibition comprising the fifteen initial purchases and a further thirteen self-portraits by artists admired, and approached by Thomas Ryan. Works in the debut exhibition were supplemented with works loaned from several local and national collections, including works from the Ulster Museum and Dublin's Municipal Gallery. [4] [5]
In subsequent years additions to the collection have come from selected members of Ireland's leading art societies including the Royal Hibernian Academy, Royal Ulster Academy, and Aosdána. [4] The collection has expanded to include works by painters, sculptors, printmakers, ceramicists, photographers and mixed media artists. Although comprising mainly twentieth and twenty-first century artists, the collection has also grown to include historical works from previous centuries. [2] Each year the new artists are invited to a meal at the Jean Monnet Theatre where their works are projected onto the walls as the artists are formally introduced to the assembled audience. [3]
Selected works from the collection have toured Ireland at various times including 1989 when a large selection was displayed at the National Gallery of Ireland in Dublin and then travelled to the Arts Council of Northern Ireland Gallery in Belfast and the Crawford Art Gallery in Cork. Dr Edward Walsh presented the same selection of works from the collection in a visiting exhibition at the Boston University Art Gallery in 1992. [3] In 2003 a selection of works was presented at Draíocht in Blanchardstown. [6]
The collection is split across several buildings including the Foundation Building and Plassey House. In 2012 the collection had grown to 465 works from 438 artists. [7]
Anne Madden is an English-born painter, who is well known in both Ireland and France where she has divided her time since her marriage to Louis le Brocquy in 1958.
Seán Keating was an Irish romantic-realist painter who painted some iconic images of the Irish War of Independence and of the early industrialization of Ireland. He spent two weeks or so each year during the late summer on the Aran Islands and his many portraits of island people depicted them as rugged heroic figures.
This is a list of private and public art galleries, centres and collections on the island of Ireland arranged by county and city/town.
Samuel Walsh was born in London, England to Irish parents in 1951. His mother was from Limerick, Ireland and his father from Ennis, Ireland. After his family returned to Ireland to relocate in Limerick, Walsh continued to live and study in London. He joined his family in Limerick in 1968, where he resided until 1990. He now lives and works in County Clare.
Raymond PiperHRUA HRHA MUniv was British a botanist and an artist.
Muriel Brandt was an Irish artist known for her portraiture and murals.
Deborah Brown was a Northern Irish sculptor. She is well known in Ireland for her pioneering exploration of the medium of fibre glass in the 1960s and established herself as one of the country's leading sculptors, achieving extensive international acclaim.
Edward McGuire (1932–1986) was an Irish painter.
Gladys Maccabe, MBE HRUAFRSA MA(Hons)ROI was a Northern Irish artist, journalist and founder of The Ulster Society of Women Artists.
Mick O'Dea is an Irish artist best known as a painter of portraits and historical subjects.
Anna CheyneHRUA was a British artist and sculptor working with diverse media including batik, ceramics, papier mâché, stone, fibreglass and bronze. Cheyne was born and educated in England but moved to Northern Ireland after her marriage to architect Donald Cheyne.
Margaret Clarke RHA was an Irish portrait painter.
Kathleen Mabel Bridle ARUA was a British artist and teacher. She influenced Northern Irish artists such as William Scott and T.P. Flanagan.
Eilis O'Connell is an abstract sculptor. She is known for her free-standing works and wall pieces.
Michael Evin Nolan was an Irish abstract painter and sculptor. He was much inspired by Henri Matisse, Piet Mondrian, Amedeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso and Jacques Lipchitz. His work is often distinguished by vibrant colours and geometric forms.
Terence Philip FlanaganPPRUA HRUA RHAMBE was a landscape painter and teacher from Northern Ireland.
Vera Klute ARHA is a contemporary artist based in Ireland since 2001.
Dennis Henry Osborne HRUA was a British artist and teacher who worked mainly in oil and watercolour. Osborne exhibited widely in Canada, Ireland and the UK. He was a follower of the Euston Road School and the Post-Impressionist Paul Cézanne. He was a Honorary Academician of the Royal Ulster Academy of Arts.
Paul Nietsche was a Ukrainian artist and teacher who emigrated to Ulster in 1936 where he became a central figure on the Belfast artistic and literary scenes between the 1930s and his death in 1950.
John Shinnors is an Irish landscape artist whose work has become increasingly abstract over time. He is a member of Aosdána and sits as the visual arts representative on EV+A.