Chicago Sun-Times

IRISH TIES

‘ Crossroads’ exhibit makes case for patriotism, faith

- BY BILL STAMETS

Irish taste in arts, crafts and decor is surveyed in “Ireland: Crossroads of Art and Design, 16901840” at the Art Institute. If the 328 items on view offer slight interest as artworks, they supply an archaeolog­y of the upper crust. The historical theme “celebrates the Irish as artists, collectors, and patrons.”

Recently opened, the exhibition begins with national totems: a rack of 10,000- yearold Irish Elk antlers, a green gilt catgut harp, and “Portrait of a Lady as Hibernia,” Robert Fagan’s canvas of a woman baring a breast and playing a harp. Its “broken strings,” notes a wall text, “possibly allude( s) to the loss of Irish independen­ce.” Upon exiting the exhibition, you can quaff Guinness Draught at themuseum’s three cafes.

Christophe­r Monkhouse — chair and curator of the museum’s European Decorative Arts— curated the 2009 exhibition “A Case for Wine: From King Tut to Today.” Now he and assistant research curator Leslie Fitzpatric­k organize 10 galleries with an aptly traditiona­l layout unlike the more inventive “Shatter Rupture Break,” the Art Institute’s current exhibition in its Modern Series.

Although there’s a first edition of Edmund Burke’s 1757 book “A Philosophi­cal Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful” in a vitrine, the wall texts, audio tour and catalog focus more on the cultural terrain, than the aesthetics of the objects.

The curious array of skillfully crafted artifacts includes: beer jug and cream jug, chandelier, cither, crucifix, crystal, epergne, flask, gorget, monteith, napkin, salver, scroll salt, toaster, and wine cellarete and wine cistern.

Who owned all these things? Monkhouse says the “wealthy Irish” and “superrich.”

How did they decorate their city and country houses? In the illustrate­d catalog published by Yale University Press, Toby Barnard weighs their taste in pictures: “It is hard to know whether buyers consciousl­y chose secular rather than sacred topics, or Irish rather than foreign scenes.” But such questions of class, faith and patriotism are the crux of the exhibit.

Acoustigui­de commentary on a 1680 portrait of Sir Neil O’Neill, 2nd Baronet of Killyeagh, interprets its symbols: “The imagery here was unambiguou­sly pro- Ireland, readily understood as a defiant reaction to English rule.”

Scattered historical details are compelling. We learn that Irish- mademusket­s armed British regiments dispatched to quell unrest in the 13 colonies, instead of Ireland’s 32 counties. After portraying the Speaker of the Irish House of Commons, American painter Gilbert Stuart would start his famous unfinished painting of George Washington in 1796.

At the exhibition’s entrance, a wall text advocates a defensive agenda. The organizers claim for Ireland “a cosmopolit­anism at odds with the common view of Irish culture as rural and insular.” The curators resourcefu­lly assemble an “artistic diaspora” of works, even getting some private donors to kick in shipping costs.

If artisans outnumber artists, the outcome indeed documents the consumeris­m of the Irish elite. Discoverin­g the political, religious, sociologic­al and even geological factors that contextual­ize all these precious domestic furnishing­s is the main draw. Connoisseu­rs of antiques may disagree.

 ?? COURTESY OF THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO ?? ABOVE: “The Sheet ofWater at Carton, with the Duke and Duchess of Leinster about to Board a Rowing Boat,” by Thomas Roberts, 1775– 76. Private collection.
COURTESY OF THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO ABOVE: “The Sheet ofWater at Carton, with the Duke and Duchess of Leinster about to Board a Rowing Boat,” by Thomas Roberts, 1775– 76. Private collection.
 ?? | COURTESY OF PYMS GALLERY ?? LEFT: “A View of Irishtown from Sandymount,” by James Arthur O’Connor, circa 1823. Private collection.
| COURTESY OF PYMS GALLERY LEFT: “A View of Irishtown from Sandymount,” by James Arthur O’Connor, circa 1823. Private collection.
 ?? | JAMIE STUKENBERG, PROFESSION­AL GRAPHICS ?? “Portable Harp,” by John Egan, circa 1820. The O’Brien Collection.
| JAMIE STUKENBERG, PROFESSION­AL GRAPHICS “Portable Harp,” by John Egan, circa 1820. The O’Brien Collection.

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