News

(CN) - Irish folk art that showcases working-class life in the province of Ulster is going home, recovery specialists said Tuesday, nearly a decade after the painting was stolen from Belfast. Based in ...
Artist’s coffee table book an ode to Irish grandparents who worked in Schuylkill’s coal fields ... a 130-page hardcover compendium of 70 of McCormick’s folk art paintings with associated text.
The Whyte’s sale, on March 3rd at 6pm in the Freemason’s Hall on Molesworth Street, Dublin, will be followed by deVeres’ Irish art auction on March 25th, with Adam’s taking place a day later.
Fonsie Mealy’s The fossilised horns and skull of a great Irish deer (Cervus Giganteus Hibernicus) sold for €40,000 at Fonsie Mealy’s Chatsworth Summer Fine Art Sale, which took place on June 18 and 19 ...
Paintings from one of Ireland’s most prestigious art collections are to be sold in London. Works from the collection built up by Dublin-based millionaire businessman Michael Smurfit – and ...
They suspect a number of art owners have remained oblivious to the fact that their original paintings - some of which are over 200-years-old - may have been nabbed and discreetly replaced by ...
Elgin plans to hire folk artist Eric Dowdle to do a painting of the city, which will be turned into a puzzle and part of America's 250th anniversary celebration.
Irish man finds stolen paintings worth $200,000 in his garden hedges (PHOTOS) Four rare paintings stolen last year from a house in Co. Wicklow have been recovered in a very surprising way.
The paintings are more traditional, not the funky, folk art she is best known for. The work gives her a chance to be versatile and pour her soul into the process. “I go into a different world ...
The paintings, valued at more than €1.3 million, will be on permanent display at the Killorglin town centre project and will form the biggest art collection held by Kerry County Council.
On Saturday, LeBree and members of the Seminole tribe were at the society’s Seminole-Miccosukee Folk Art exhibit at 219 SW Second Ave. in Fort Lauderdale. The exhibit runs through Sept. 1.