logo
‘Freak pictures': Ireland's art revolutionaries who were treated so badly one fled to a nunnery

‘Freak pictures': Ireland's art revolutionaries who were treated so badly one fled to a nunnery

The Guardian10-04-2025
Two oils on canvas hang together, strikingly similar, in the first room of the National Gallery of Ireland's new show. Both titled Composition, they date from 1924 and 1925. They're cubist still lifes, with the regular, geometric patterns and contrasting colour schemes favoured by many early 20th-century modernists, Marcel Duchamp and Juan Gris among them.
The paintings are clearly by the same hand. Except they're not. The 1924 work, featuring what might be a fried egg, or might be an easel, is by Evie Hone; the piece from the following year, centred on a chessboard, is by her best friend, Mainie Jellett. These two women, virtually unknown outside their homeland, and not well-known even there, revolutionised art in Ireland by introducing modernism.
In the deeply conservative country that it was at the time, that didn't always meet a favourable response. And yet they soldiered on, buoyed up by one another across several decades, plying their craft, and turning their hands to different styles and art-forms.
So the exhibition feels very eclectic. Here there's cubism; there, abstraction; in the next room, we're back to figuration. In another room landscapes, and elsewhere devotional religious art. Most are paintings, but one room is filled with the stained glass that Hone spent part of her career focusing on – she made commissions for public buildings and churches alike.
But there is one element that unites almost all the 90 artworks in the exhibition, and it's colour. Bright colours, primary colours; rich colours, strong colours; clashing colours, harmonious colours: they sing out of every room, and without knowing anything else about the women who put them together, they tell you that this pair believed in life and believed in art.
They were both born in Dublin, into well-to-do middle class families. While they met for the first time in London during the first world war, this exhibition traces their story from the early 1920s, when they moved to Paris to train under André Lhote then, Albert Gleizes, whose work exploring abstraction they very much admired. He didn't take students, but the pair had made up their minds: he remained in touch with them all their lives, and much is made in the show of the importance of his influence on their work. It was a two-way street – Gleizes acknowledged the importance of Hone and Jellett on his own oeuvre – but art history in its inimitable way has remembered him, and airbrushed them out.
For now, though, they're back. The quality of the art is as eclectic as the styles. The standout piece is Jellett's Decoration (1923): fantastically well composed, immensely pleasing, this piece pays homage to the work of the Renaissance artists whose work both women adored (they knew it mostly through reproductions), painted in tempera on wood with gold leaf to reference that period of art history. But it's more than a homage: it's a marrying together of old and new, a gorgeous abstract depiction of the ages-old Madonna and Child, contained within the shape of a Trecento altarpiece, with a pointillist background.
Sheer genius, and considered today to be the single most significant modernist painting in Irish history, it went down like a ton of bricks: writer George 'AE' Russell made the astonishing remark that there was nothing much to say about it. The following year, 1924, Jellett and Hone had a joint show – the current show in Dublin is only the second time their work has been shown together – which was met, again, with much criticism.
The Irish Times used the phrase 'freak pictures' in a review, and Russell again had a field day, referring to their work as 'artistic malaria'. It all weighed heavily on them both, so much so that it was almost certainly a factor in Hone's decision to enter an Anglican convent in Cornwall in 1925, much to the horror of Jellett, who was left alone trying to convince the Irish art world of the importance of modernism.
Happily Hone's life as a nun was short-lived, and just over a year later Jellett went to retrieve her and return her to her primary vocation as an artist. But religion remained a central theme, for Hone – who later in her life became a Catholic – and also for Jellett, whose other works shown here include a striking Deposition (1939) and an intense crucifixion titled The Ninth Hour (1941).
Hone, though, would mostly pour her religious feelings into her stained glass, using her cubist training and love of strong colour to great effect in a series of windows including one often-seen on Irish TV, My Four Green Fields, as it's installed in the Department of the Taoiseach (having been made originally for the 1939 New York World's Fair) providing a backdrop to many a government statement. The window, bringing the symbols of Ireland's four provinces – Ulster, Munster, Leinster and Connacht – together, was one of her greatest triumphs.
But an even more magnificent example of her stained glass is in England, and sadly behind closed doors (excepting occasional public tours of the college). It's a huge (almost 1,300 sq ft) window in Eton College chapel, and it was commissioned to replace a window destroyed by bombing during the second world war. The window, showing the Last Supper in the lower section and the crucifixion above, is regarded as one of Britain's finest 20th-century examples of stained glass. In Dublin we get only a glimpse of its splendour via a watercolour study Hone made in 1950.
By then, Jellett had died, aged 46, of cancer. Hone visited her in the nursing home on her last night. Neither woman had ever married; and while there is no suggestion they were a couple, they clearly filled a role that might be called a partnership in each other's lives. Jellett had spent her final years much influenced by Chinese art, after a visit to an exhibition at London's Royal Academy. Hone, despite the legacy of childhood polio which affected her throughout her life, continued to travel in France and Italy – as works here attest – and painted the woods and landscape around her home in Marlay in the Dublin hills.
By the end of their careers, the women – whose work had been so similar in the early days – had each found her own style, with Hone's intuitive, freer approach contrasting with Jellett's much more precise attention to detail. Convergence, divergence and a friendship that brought the stirrings of the great changes in Ireland that continue to play out to this day.
Mainie Jellett and Evie Hone: The Art of Friendship is at the National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin, from 10 April to 10 August
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Why Edinburgh International Festival is unique, fantastic
Why Edinburgh International Festival is unique, fantastic

Scotsman

time11 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Why Edinburgh International Festival is unique, fantastic

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... In November 1945, not long after the end of the Second World War, The Scotsman revealed plans were being drawn up for a music and drama festival in Edinburgh. 'Not only will the projected event probably be the first great post-war international art assembly in Europe but it will certainly be the first of its scope and importance to be held in Britain,' we reported. Two years later, the first Edinburgh International Festival was held, with a founding vision to 'reunite people through great art'. As the world's biggest and best arts festival gets underway, we should remember how it all started. Its ethos is just as important now as it was then. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Artists of the Circa and Opera Australia ensembles take part in a dress rehearsal of Orpheus and Eurydice | Keith Saunders However, this is not a time to be maudlin, it is a time to celebrate humanity at its finest. This year will see more than 2,000 artists from 42 nations put on 133 performances, including opera Orpheus and Eurydice, Scottish Ballet's Mary, Queen of Scots, in which the Renaissance meets punk meets haute couture, and Holst's The Planets, performed by the London Philharmonic Orchestra.

Four-bedroom Victorian home has wowed house-hunters as it hits market – but wait until you see horrors that lurk inside
Four-bedroom Victorian home has wowed house-hunters as it hits market – but wait until you see horrors that lurk inside

Scottish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

Four-bedroom Victorian home has wowed house-hunters as it hits market – but wait until you see horrors that lurk inside

The home's fireplace is particularly eerie DARK DECOR Four-bedroom Victorian home has wowed house-hunters as it hits market – but wait until you see horrors that lurk inside Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THIS glamorous Victorian home is known as the "Lavender House' because of its soft, painted exterior. However, the four-bed house - which is on sale for nearly £900,000 - hides a shocking secret. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 The home in Hastings has a annexe to use as an Airbnb Credit: rightmove 6 However, the inside of the main home has a sinister feeling Credit: rightmove 6 Mythological fauns are carved into the fireplace Credit: rightmove Located in Hastings, East Sussex, the glamorous Victorian home looks like the ideal house. With high windows looking out to the street, it is one of the biggest houses on the quiet road. It is built in a classical style, which exudes glamour and high class - something topped off by its coat of lavender paint. The front door has an ornate metal pattern and a frosted window, which looks onto a flight of of stairs taking visitors up into the house. However, that whimsical impression quickly begins to fall apart when entering the house. Pictures on Rightmove reveal that a pair of Renaissance-style saloon doors lead to a cupboard under the stairs, but things get really creepy when you head further in. The fireplace is decorated with a ghoulish design, depicting medieval style fauns lifting cherubic children into trees. The fauns have horns growing from their heads and their goat-like legs, complete with cloven hooves. Also, the house comes with a 'very traditional' toilet, with a wooden seat and 'thunderbox' fittings. Most of the walls are painted in a ghostly lime green and all of the floss are made of wood, which Rightmove says gives the impression that the house is 'breathing'. Iconic Grand Designs 'perfect' house which couple spent 20 years 'painstakingly' renovating hits market for £1.5million The huge rooms - set across three floors - are sparsely furnished, save for Victorian-style furniture. Much of the furnishings are covered in white shrouds, matching the lacey curtains cloaking the windows. The house is currently owned by an artist, who converted a separate annexe to the rear into an AirBnB letting. The seller is asking for £899,950 for the home which is a 15 minute walk to Hasting's station. It sits in the famous All Saints Street, which has several pubs and houses built in classical styles. Hastings made headlines just months ago, after another glamorous home went on sale in the area. St Ann's Cottage on Castle Hill Road has five-bedrooms as well as a centuries-old cave. The 18th-century home was on sale for £600,000 after being listed at £350,000 just a year earlier. 6 The toilet is built in a very old-fashioned style Credit: rightmove 6 The walls are painted in an eerie lime green Credit: rightmove

Beyoncé sends fans wild as she reunites with Destiny's Child after seven years
Beyoncé sends fans wild as she reunites with Destiny's Child after seven years

Daily Mirror

time5 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Beyoncé sends fans wild as she reunites with Destiny's Child after seven years

Pop superstar Beyonce had an epic end to her Cowboy Carter world tour as she was joined by her Destiny's Child bandmates Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams on stage Beyoncé celebrated the end of her record-breaking Cowboy Carter tour with a very special reunion with her Destiny's Child bandmates. She brought the curtain down on the tour in spectacular fashion as the band reunited for a series of hits. ‌ The pop superstar performed her final show at Las Vegas' Allegiant Stadium and was joined by Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams. They performed their mega hits Bootylicious and Lose My Breath. ‌ Destiny's Child also gave a rendition of Beyoncé's Renaissance track Energy as well as the viral "mute" challenge. The last time the trio performed together was back in 2018 when Kelly and Michelle made a cameo at Beyoncé's Coachella show. ‌ They split back in 2005, with the fresh reunion sparking a huge frenzy among their fans as they declared it the "perfect ending" to the tour. One fan said: "THE HUGGING AND HOLDING HANDS AT THE END??? I'M FALLING TO MY KNEES." Another added: "The Cowboy Carter era changed my life, just like renaissance did, and I cannot imagine where act 3 will take us. Oh Beyonce the once in a lifetime artist you are." ‌ Someone else commented: "Oh when Destiny's Child reunites, it's not nostalgia - it's divine timing... Beyoncé closed Cowboy Carter with the loudest mic drop in history." A fourth wrote: "Y'all will never understand how iconic this is considering they're one of the most successful girl groups of all time." Another shared: "Beyoncé closing Cowboy Carter with Kelly and Michelle by her side feels like the perfect ending." The tour wasn't always smooth sailing for Beyoncé, however, as she had her unreleased music stolen during a stop. According to a police report, the music was taken from a car in Atlanta. ‌ Footage showed plans and concert set lists were also taken from the Jeep Wagoneer. Beyoncé, who has won 35 Grammy Awards since 2001, stoically continued to impress her fans despite the news. In addition to the music, two MacBook laptops, Apple headphones, luxury clothing and accessories, and "sensitive material" belonging to the star were stolen, police said. Earlier in the tour, Beyoncé almost fell out of a car, which was propelled into the air at a concert in her home city. While performing in Houston during her flying car stint, the cables appeared to be uneven and left Beyoncé tilting over the edge until she was brought back down. In videos taken by fans, the singer kept it professional and was cool, calm and collected while the incident was resolved. The star since addressed the situation with humour on Instagram. She shared a video montage of her show, including her car malfunction, along with the caption: "Sittin' Sidewayz". The tour, which began in late April, has taken Queen Bey to several large stadiums across Europe and the US.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store