Since 1998, Díseart Institute of Education and
Celtic Culture has occupied the former Presentation Sisters' convent on Green
Street, Dingle. This beautiful, stately, neo-gothic building designed by JJ
McCarthy, was home to the Presentation enclosed community of sisters,
established in Ireland in the last quarter of the eighteenth century, and who
first arrived in Dingle in 1829. Since then hundreds of sisters have given a
labour of love and service to the people of this area of West Kerry for over
170 years, educating and helping all especially the poor during very difficult
times.
In 1922, Sister Ita Macken commissioned Irishman and one of the
foremost stained glass artists of all time, Harry Clarke to design and install
12 stained glass windows in the convent chapel. For the princely sum of
£1,000.00, Clarke installed a series of windows that have been described
as "breathtaking", "magnificent" and "intensely moving", by some of the recent
visitors and vividly illustrate Clarke's unique style with lively animated
faces, a profusion of rich vibrant colours and generous ornamentation.
Harry Clarke was born on March 17th, 1889 in North Frederick Street,
Dublin, where his father Joshua had a decorating and stained glass business.
While still at school with the Jesuits in Belvedere, Clarke showed promise in
drawing and art and was described as a reserved and sensitive boy. He was
apprenticed in 1905 for five years to his father's business while attending
schools of art in Dublin and London for periods in between. By 1914, he had
studied, exhibited, won a travelling studentship, and travelled to Paris and
Chartres. His first stained glass commission was for the windows of the Honan
chapel in University College Cork, which was completed in 1917. Between 1917
and his early death in 1931, in spite of ill health, he carried out over forty
commissions for churches in Ireland, Great Britain and elsewhere. One of his
most famous works is the Geneva Window, commissioned by the state for the
International Labour Building of the United Nations.
Over the past few
years, Díseart have been delighted to open this beautiful chapel and its
very special set of six two-light stained glass windows to the public. With
plans to develop the building and its facilities further, it is expected that
this "national treasure" will become a popular attraction for all visitors to
Dingle and West Kerry.
|
| Joshua Clarke moved to Dublin from
Leeds at the age of 18 in 1886, 3 years after marrying Sligo woman Bridget
MacGonigle, he set up his own stained glass and decorating business. J. Clarke
& Sons at No. 33 North Frederick St., where their 4 children were
born. |
| |
|
| 1889 |
Henry Patrick Clarke (Harry) is born
exactly a year after his brother Walter on 17th of March. Brought up in 33
North Frederick St. and educated at Marlborough St. Model School and Belvedere
College. |
| 1903 |
His mother, Bridget dies and Harry
who was very close to her leaves school. |
| 1904 |
Works at the office of Thomas
McNamara, Architect. McNamara encourages him to go into stained glass. |
| 1905 |
Begins a five-year apprenticeship to
his father's decorating and stained glass business. Harry also starts night
classes in stained glass at the Metropolitan School of Art, Kildare Street,
under A.E. Child. |
| 1906 |
Paints first piece of glass. Goes to
London for two months to study at the South Kensington School of design.
Returns to Dublin to resume apprenticeship and night classes. |
| 1907 |
Second visit to London |
| 1908 |
Unwell from January to June |
| 1909 |
Visits Inisheer in Aran Islands in
August with Austin Mulloy who later worked on the Convent Windows. He returns
each summer for the next six years. First free-lance graphic commissions. |
| 1910 |
First exhibition with the Arts &
Crafts Society of Ireland and annual Art Industries Exhibition, R.D.S. |
| 1911 |
Wins the Gold Medal for stained
glass in the Board of Education National competition, South Kensington. Wins
again in 1912 and 1913. |
| 1912 |
Work exhibited in Dresden. |
| 1913 |
Leaves Art School and moves to
London where he sets up a studio. First recorded illustrations from literature.
He was commissioned to illustrate Pope's 'The Rape of the Lock' and later
Coleridge's 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner'. (The blocks for both were burned
in the Easter Rising of 1916). Awarded a Travelling Scholarship. |
| 1914 |
Travels to Paris and Chartres in
January with Scholarship. Returns one week later with a severe chill to London.
St. Patrick panel exhibited in the Louvre. Returns to France in May to study
Medieval stained glass. Marries former student, Margaret Crilley on October
31st. |
| 1915 |
First piece of stained glass
commissioned by Sir John Robert O'Connell for the Honan Chapel in Cork. 11
single light windows of the Virgin Mary, St. Joseph and nine Irish Saints. (He
was developing a relatively new technique - plating and aciding which allowed
for greater detail and variety of colour in a single piece of glass. Over the
remaining 15 years of his career he produced over 40 stained glass,
commissioned mainly in Britain and Ireland. Every finished window was displayed
at the studio before being sent off as Harry believed the public had a right to
be able to see it.) |
| 1916 |
Easter Rising; blocks burnt for what
would have been his first illustrated book. Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy
Tales Illustrated by Harry Clarke published. He became well know as an
illustrator and did 6 books in total as well as a number of smaller
volumes. |
| 1917 |
Honan Chapel windows completed, they
received a rapturous reception. |
| 1918 |
Starts teaching at the Metropolitan
School of Art (until 1923). |
| 1919 |
Bodkin's article "The Art of Mr.
Harry Clarke" published in the STUDIO. |
| 1920 |
First stained glass commission in
England. |
| 1921 |
Death of his father, Joshua. Assumes
management of J. Clarke & Sons with brother Walter. Until now he had been
cooking independently paying his father for use of the studio facilities. |
| 1922 |
Mother Superior Ita Macken of the
Presentation Sisters, Dingle commissioned Harry Clarke to design and create
twelve stained glass lancet windows depicting scenes from the life of Christ.
Exhibition in Paris. |
| 1923 |
Windows in Glasgow and Brisbane
acclaimed. Company moves to more spacious rooms in No. 6 and 7 North Frederick
St. opposite the original No. 33 residence. |
| 1924 |
Ballinrobe and Ashdown Park windows
commissioned. Exhibits in Aonach Tailteann RDS, wins gold trophy for his "Eve
of St. Agnes" window and 3 silver medals. According to to W. B. Yeats, "Now the
acknowledged best glass is made by Harry Clarke". |
| 1925 |
First London Exhibition - book
illustrations. Suffers from a serious eye infection. Returns to Dublin in
December and visits Ballinrobe on December 26 - 27 to see all his windows
fixed. |
| 1926 |
Nearly fatal bicycle accident in
January, leaves him with fractured ribs and a compression at the base of his
skull. Within 3 weeks he is rushed to hospital delirious. Recovered enough by
Easter to visit Spain, Gibraltar and Tangier with Lennox Robinson. Commissions:
Newport Last Judgement and Geneva Window - an Irish Government Commission for
the League of Nations, International Labour Organisation building in Geneva -
13 panels each recording an incident or scene from the work of an Irish
Writer. |
| 1927 |
Walter is very sick and unable to
work all of the time. Work begins to fall behind schedule. Exhibits stained
glass in the Glass House, Fulham. |
| 1928 |
Increasingly ill. His illustrated
SWINBURNE published by John Lane. |
| 1929 |
1st American commission for Bagonne,
New Jersey. The Geneva window commissioned by the Irish Government in 1926 for
the League of Nations, International Labour Organisation building in Geneva, is
completed. Prudish reaction, and they are never sent to Geneva due to
implications of 'sex, drunkenness and sin'. (Now in the Wolfson Initiative,
Miami in Florida.) Increasingly bad health, Doctors insist he travels to
sanitorium at Davros, Switzerland. The last exhibition of his work held (in his
absence) during his life in the Mill Hall, Dublin. |
| 1930 |
The decorating side of the business
is running at a substantial rate and is liquidated in March. The stained glass
business becomes the 'Harry Clarke Stained Glass Studio'. Lennox Robinson
granted power of attorney in his absence, of which few people are aware.
Stained glass craftsman Charles Simmons suggested as new Manager and arrives in
Dublin for a trial year. Harry moves to Pau, South of France and returns to
Dublin in May. His health does not permit much time at the studio which is on
the verge of falling apart. Death of his older brother Walter in July. In
October, Harry leaves Ireland for the last time accompanied by Lennox Robinson,
they travel back to Darvos. |
| 1931 |
Harry Clarke dies in his sleep at
Coire, in Switzerland, on January 6th, on his way home to Dublin. He was
42. |