Merrion Art

Meet the Merrion Square Artists every Sunday

Category: News (Page 1 of 3)

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Christmas P’art’Y

Join us on the 14th – 16th of December for Christmas fun in Merrion Square.

Time 11am till dark.

50 special paintings for 50euros each!

Come early to grab something special.

Roll on the summer!

After a long cold winter exhibiting on Merrion Square, it was great this weekend to see a little sunshine peeping through, why not drop in for a stroll and chat!

Christmas on Merrion Square

Many artists on Merrion Square who are licensed to display their work every day for the month of December will be extending their Saturday & Sunday weekend exhibition, choosing to also hang through the week…If your passing, stop and say hello and consider a present for that special someone!

Merrion Square Open Art Gallery

Bloomsday Festival June 16th, 17th & 18th

This year Merrion square artists are taking part in the wonderful Bloomsday festival.  We will on Merrion square from 10am – 5pm over the three days where there will be a festive feel to Merrion square as exhibiting artists join in the Bloomsday celebrations.

Artists will be dressed in Bloomsday attire, there will be Art Demonstrations alongside a special exhibition of  ‘Joyce’ Paintings to be sold at a very special price.

At 2.00pm, Artist Elizabeth Prendergast will take visitors on a ‘Lunchtime Sculpture Walk’ visiting the many fine exhibits and monuments dotted around the park, commemorating historical events or people…Not to be missed!

Media Crew

‘Vivify’, a Media production company who have been commissioned to make some promotional videos for our Open Air Art Gallery are scheduled to shoot on Merrion Square tomorrow so looking for a good display from as many licence holders possible!

Present on the square every Sunday

We are present at Merrion Square every Sunday, hail, rain or shine.  During inclement weather we hoist canopies and plastic sheeting as protection to the elements.  Each week we welcome visitors and any enquiries or curiosities they may have.  Your visit to our Open Art Gallery is an opportune time to meet the artist and view  the work first hand, consider purchasing an original piece or art for your home or as a present, have it named and signed by the artist, discuss commissioning a piece of artwork or just stopping by for a chat or to say hello!

Merrion Square Open Air Art Gallery, Sundays 10am – 5pm

New Signage

Letting folk know the who, where, what, why and when!

A Brief History of Merrion Square

Merrion Square is especially known for its Georgian houses with their brightly painted doors and their fanlights, Leinster House, and the National Gallery.

Plaques on the walls of the Georgian houses that surround Merrion Square show the famous people who used to live there:

No. 1 Oscar Wilde,

Nos. 52 and 82 William Butler Yeats

No. 58 Daniel O’Connell

No. 70 Sheridan Le Fanu

No. 84 George William Russell

No. 77 Andrew O’Connor Sculptor

No. 65 Edward Schrödinger

No. 64 John Lighton Synge.

Merrion Square was set out between 1762 and 1764 and three sides of it remain the finest example of Georgian Architecture to be seen in Ireland. The fourth side is occupied by Leinster House and the National Gallery.

The Merrion Square park was originally kept for the private use of the residents of the surrounding buildings.  The Catholic Church purchased it as a possible site for the first catholic cathedral in Dublin.  The park was leased in 1974 by the St Laurence O’Toole Diocesan Trust (acting on behalf of the Archdiocese of Dublin) to the Dublin Corporation for public use.  Now you can walk in the park in the sunshine and enjoy the free concerts during summer as well as viewing the art on display on the railings on Sundays.

There are many fine sculptures dotted around the park, each with it’s own commemoration of historical events or people.

One of the most loved of all is The ‘Jesters Chair’ a memorial to Writer, Satirist, Actor and Comic Dermot Morgan. He won a BAFTA for the best comedy performance in 1998 and is best remembered for his role as Father Ted Crilly in the television series Father Ted.  He died on 28th February 1998 of a heart attack just 24 hours after recording the last episode of Father Ted while hosting a party in his home.

Oscar Wilde by Danny Osborne: The sculpture is created using different coloured stones from around the world. His jacket is made of nephrite jade, his cuffs and jacket collar are made from thulite, trousers from blue stone granite from Norway, shoes from black Indian granite and his green carnation, buttons and shoelaces are made from bronze.

On the west-side of the square is the Rutland Fountain dating from 1792.  The fountain is a commemoration of the Duke of Rutland, Charles Manners who commissioned the piece before his untimely death at the age of thirty-three. Originally water poured from the two bronze lion heads on either side and from the small central conduit water flowed into a large stone conch shell at the base of the fountain.  It was restored in late 2008 and 2009.

Promoting Merrion

 

Organising a major promotional campaign for the wonderful ‘Merrion Square Open Art Gallery’…large Foam Board Posters, 10,000 full  our double side leaflets, Car Window Decals to start…So calling on all Merrion artists to get on board for distribution duties, Its your gallery!  More to follow…

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