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Art Collection (Continued)

2 Night Autumn Getaway

September & October Packages
Enjoy a 2 night break at Kelly's ...Book Now 2 Night Midweek - Full Board from €250pp + 10%sc

CULINARY CREATIONS

COOKERY DEMONSTRATIONS (21 - 26 November, 2010)
Join Neven Maguire, Eugene Callaghan & Stephane Rochard will share their culinary sec ...Book Now 2 Days Midweek €250pp + 10%s.c. (FULL BOARD)

SIMPLY PAINTING

SIMPLY PAINTING with Frank Clarke
Join Frank Clarke this midweek and take home a masterpiece ...Book Now full board €240 p.p. + 10% service charge

Art Collection (Continued)

In 1978, Mrs Breda Kelly offered to buy all the works then on show from the Arts Council. The council duly approved, on the condition that they would remain on public display, a stipulation, which has been followed. Some years earlier, the hotel had begun a policy of holding an annual group exhibition to coincide with the Wexford Festival, and these have represented most of the best living artists in the country.

To list the names of all those painters, sculptors and graphic artists whose work has been acquired over the years would involve a lengthy catalogue, in fact almost an art encyclopaedia. At least three generations are represented and apart from the international figures mentioned, the names run the gamut of Irish art from Jack Yeats, our greatest figure, down to younger contemporaries such as Martin Gale, Felim Egan, Elizabeth Magill, Michael Mulcahy, Ross Wilson, John Shinnors and Mick O’Dea. Elder statesmen of Irish painting such as Tony O’Malley, Louis le Broquy and William Crozier are all represented, Crozier very well indeed – and he has also produced some fine, lyrical, commissioned works which have been reproduced, very well effectively, on the hotel’s menu cards. The generation of Daniel O’Neill, Patrick Collins, George Campbell, Colin Middleton (all dead alas) is also prominent. And a special room has been given over to the work of Maurice MacGonigal, one of the best-loved painters of his time. Other eminent figures, past or present, include Mary Swanzy, Norah McGuinness, Mainie Jellett, W.J. Leech, Tom Carr, Guggi Rowan and Sibille Unger.

Sculpture has its place, too. The best pieces are those by Conor Fallon, George Walsh and the late Hilary Heron. The Hilary Heron wall sculpture is one of her best works and one of the few that can be seen outside a private collection. Two large, energetic freestanding pieces by Benedict Byrne have been placed in the pool area, which is a courageous innovation. Placing, in fact, plays a considerable role, and nowhere is it more sticking that the long gallery space at the reception area, where on entering you find yourself fronted by works by Le Broquy, O’Malley, Crozier, Hitchens – all names which would distinguish any public gallery of collection. In the dining room too, artworks look down from all sides and angles, including pictures by Gillian Ayres, Camille Souter, Gerard Dillon, Sean O’Sullivan, Patrick Scott, Martin Gale and of course MacGonigal.

This is art as it should be seen – by people of all tastes, who may like or dislike what they see but still happy to eat, drink and move about or lounge about in the midst of these clustering artworks. And seen it is, as Bill has commissioned artists to design other elements for him – Guggi Rowan is producing a design for the crockery, Crozier can be seen on the menu covers and wine labels, Elizabeth Cope with her mural on the swimming pool wall and Ben Byrne’s sculptures in the Aqua Club.

As a tribute to the artists whose work has resided at Kelly’s over the years, the two new bedrooms suites have been named in their honour – Crozier and Tony O’Malley Suites.