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Aosdána Limerick’s Influence on Ireland’s Artistic Fellowship

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  Aosdána Limerick’s Influence on Ireland’s Artistic Fellowship By Kieran Beville From the Limerick City Gallery of Art to the studios tucked behind Georgian terraces and Shannon-side warehouses, Limerick has long been a city that punches above its weight artistically. It’s a place where creativity isn’t a luxury but a form of survival — a kind of local defiance against economic and cultural neglect. From the vibrant exhibitions at Ormston House to the student showcases of LSAD, the city hums with experimentation and grit. As debates continue about fairness and access in Irish arts funding, Limerick’s thriving and resilient creative scene offers a vivid lens through which to view Aosdána’s role — not as an institution of exclusion, but as a fellowship deeply intertwined with regional talent. Aosdána (the Irish association of artists established by the Arts Council) was founded in 1981 it carried the air of a quiet revoluti...

Gerald Griffin - A Limerick Writer's Legacy

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  Gerald Griffin A Limerick Writer’s Legacy By Kieran Beville Gerald Griffin (1803–1840) was a Limerick-born novelist, short ‑ story writer, poet, and later a member of the Congregation of the Christian Brothers. He is best known for the novel The Collegians (1829), which drew on the 1819 murder of Ellen Hanley and influenced later stage and operatic adaptations. Family and Early Years Griffin was born on 12 December 1803 in the city of Limerick. He was one of thirteen children of Patrick Griffin and Ellen (née Sheehy). The family was Catholic, and several of Gerald’s siblings pursued professional and clerical paths; his elder brother Daniel became a priest and played a role in Gerald’s education. During his childhood the family lived in Limerick and, for a period, outside the city. His schooling began in Limerick and continued under private tuition from his brother Daniel, who instructed him in languages and literature. Departure for London and Early Publications In ...

Hartnett's Voice Still Speaks

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  Michael Hartnett (1941 – 1999) Hartnett's Voice Still Speaks By Kieran Beville I met Michael Hartnett at the Doneraile (North Cork) Writers Weekend in 1981. I travelled there with Willie English in Pád Lysagtht’s car. Willie was a poet and a flamboyant character that regularly frequented the White House Bar. Pád was the owner of the Treaty Press and author of The Comic History of Limerick. I was an aspiring poet. That was the only time Hartnett and I spoke. “A poem,” he said, “should be like a good pint — strong, honest, and without froth.” This is something he said in other contexts too. But let me tell you how this restless poet from Newcastle West gave Ireland a new language for belonging — and why his voice still matters today. In the soft rain of West Limerick, where fields glisten and the air hums with stories, the ghost of Michael Hartnett still walks. His presence lingers not only in the verses he left behind, but in the voices of those who gather each April in ...

Limerick at the Heart of Irish Poetry - April Is Poetry Month 2026

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  Limerick at the Heart of Irish Poetry April Is Poetry Month 2026 By Kieran Beville Each spring, as April arrives and National Poetry Month is marked across Ireland, Limerick does more than simply join the celebration — it defines it. With the return of April Is Poetry Month 2026 , the city once again asserts itself as a confident, organised and ambitious centre of contemporary Irish poetry. Led and hosted by the Limerick Writers’ Centre, the month-long programme runs from 1–30 April and presents a rich sequence of readings, major book launches, commemorative events and a public poetry installation. Entirely free and open to all, the initiative is both a celebration and a declaration: poetry belongs in Limerick, and Limerick belongs at the centre of Ireland’s literary life. This is not a diffuse arts festival with poetry folded into a broader cultural mix. It is a focused, carefully curated programme dedicated to poetry in its many contemporary forms. For thirty days, th...

From Limerick to Alexandra - The Global Vision of Desmond O’Grady

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  From Limerick to Alexandra The Global Vision of Desmond O’Grady By Kieran Beville Portrait of Desmond O'Grady by Kieran Beville Limerick has produced its share of poets, but few have carried the city’s spirit as far across the world as Desmond O’Grady (1935–2014). Born in Limerick, he grew up near the Shannon in a city that was, in the 1930s and ’40s, still shadowed by poverty but alive with stories, song, and faith. From those modest beginnings, O’Grady became one of Ireland’s most widely travelled and cosmopolitan poets — a man whose work bridged continents and civilisations. Though he is less celebrated than contemporaries such as Seamus Heaney or Derek Mahon, O’Grady’s poetry remains among the most intellectually adventurous of the modern Irish canon. A teacher, translator, and scholar fluent in multiple languages, he wrote from Cairo to Rome, Istanbul to Boston — yet his imagination was never far from Limerick. As he once put it, “I plant my words in borrowed soil, a...