News

One day last week, Colm Mulcahy – a man I know mainly through Twitter/X – posted a picture of Harry Clarke’s stained-glass masterpiece The Geneva Window (1929) and tagged me with the ...
Clarke’s windows/panels/artworks in Bewley’s do not depict the vibrant story of the Irish Literary Revival as The Geneva Window does, but are delicate, Art Deco works with foliage, exotic ...
First-time author Marie Mullan, who's in her 80s, on the story of Harry Clarke - Ireland's most famous stained glass artist The Geneva window story in Marie’s book: Exiled in Ireland - Harry ...
The studios continued to design and execute windows in Harry's style and supported two Clarke sisters, two Clarke widows and nine Clarke children.
A new book delves into the details of Harry Clarke’s stained glass windows in such places as Dingle and Cork, writes Marjorie Brennan.
The Supreme Court has agreed to hear another appeal over ownership of the Harry Clarke stained glass windows in Bewleys Café in Grafton Street, Dublin. It follows a 2-1 decision of the Court of ...
Bewley’s Café and its landlord have agreed not to sell any of the Harry Clarke stained-glass windows currently in the café until the parties have decided whether they will appeal a High Court ...
Perhaps we may see the “Geneva Window” (on loan from the Wolfsonian Museum in Florida).
The establishment of a new museum to celebrate the work of the internationally renowned stained-glass artist Harry Clarke is being proposed by Dublin City Council.
Harry Clarke, a maestro of illustrations and spectacularly colored stained glass windows, was born in Dublin on March 17, in 1877.
The studios continued to design and execute windows in Harry's style and supported two Clarke sisters, two Clarke widows and nine Clarke children.