BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//ChamberMaster//Event Calendar 2.0//EN METHOD:PUBLISH X-PUBLISHED-TTL:P3D REFRESH-INTERVAL:P3D CALSCALE:GREGORIAN BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220730 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220926 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT X-MICROSOFT-CDO-ALLDAYEVENT:TRUE SUMMARY:As They Must Have Been: Men of the South\, 1922-2022 30 July – 25 September 2022 DESCRIPTION:Se n Keating's group portrait\, Men of the South\, was completed a century ago this year. It was created in the long shadow of the Irish War of Independence (1919-21) when\, during the truce of 11 July 1921\, members of the No. 2 (North) Cork Brigade visited the artist's Dublin studio. Keating would later remark: 'They trooped in\, dressed and armed very much as they must have been on many an ambush.'\n\nExhibited at the Munster Fine Arts Club in 1922\, Men of the South excited discussion in the Cork press and was ultimately purchased for the collection\, in 1924\, through the Gibson Bequest Fund.\n\nThis exhibition will place Men of the South in context and seek to draw out stories of the individuals depicted\, the wider theatre of war\, and the circumstances surrounding the making of a masterpiece. It will also provide a rare opportunity to encounter Men of the South with its companion painting\, 1921 An IRA Column\, which will be on kind loan from the Office of Uachtar n na h ireann.\n\nAccompanying this focused consideration of Men of the South will be a broader exploration of 1920s Ireland\, and the emergence of the Irish Free State\, as represented through selected artworks by\, among others\, George Atkinson\, Hugh C. Charde\, Margaret Clarke\, May Guinness\, Paul Henry\, John Lavery\, Louis le Brocquy\, and Jack B. Yeats.\n\nThis centenary exhibition invites visitors to reflect upon the power of art to shape or reshape our histories\, with an eye to posterity and bearing witness to lives and events 'as they must have been'. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Seá\;n Keating&rsquo\;s group portrait\, \;Men of the South\, was completed a century ago this year. It was created in the long shadow of the Irish War of Independence (1919-21) when\, during the truce of 11 July 1921\, members of the No. 2 (North) Cork Brigade visited the artist&rsquo\;s Dublin studio. Keating would later remark: &lsquo\;They trooped in\, dressed and armed very much as they must have been on many an ambush.&rsquo\;
\n\nExhibited at the Munster Fine Arts Club in 1922\, \;Men of the South \;excited discussion in the Cork press and was ultimately purchased for the collection\, in 1924\, through the Gibson Bequest Fund.
\n\nThis exhibition will place \;Men of the South \;in context and seek to draw out stories of the individuals depicted\, the wider theatre of war\, and the circumstances surrounding the making of a masterpiece. It will also provide a rare opportunity to encounter \;Men of the South \;with its companion painting\, \;1921 &ndash\; An IRA Column\, which will be on kind loan from the Office of Uachtará\;n na hÉ\;ireann.
\n\nAccompanying this focused consideration of \;Men of the South \;will be a broader exploration of 1920s Ireland\, and the emergence of the Irish Free State\, as represented through selected artworks by\, among others\, George Atkinson\, Hugh C. Charde\, Margaret Clarke\, May Guinness\, Paul Henry\, John Lavery\, Louis le Brocquy\, and Jack B. Yeats.
\n\nThis centenary exhibition invites visitors to reflect upon the power of art to shape or reshape our histories\, with an eye to posterity and bearing witness to lives and events &lsquo\;as they must have been&rsquo\;.
\n LOCATION:Crawford Art Gallery UID:e.2489.27373 SEQUENCE:3 DTSTAMP:20240328T095439Z URL:https://chamber.corkchamber.ie/events/details/as-they-must-have-been-men-of-the-south-1922-2022-30-july-25-september-2022-27373 END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR