black and white photograph of a busy street scene in Dublin.
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Sculpture trail: statues by female sculptors in Dublin

Exploring public art in Ireland's capital city

by
Adrian Murphy (opens in new window) (Europeana Foundation)

When we look at statues commemorating the lives of famous - and infamous - people on streets across Europe, how often do we know about the sculptors behind the statues?

While it can be rare to find statues commemorating women, it can be even less common to find the work of female sculptors.

On the streets of Dublin, Ireland's capital city, we find three examples of public art by female sculptors - let's explore.

Molly Malone by Jeanne Rynhart

A popular folk song about Dublin has the refrain 'In Dublin's Fair City, where the girls are so pretty, I first set my eyes on sweet Molly Malone'.

Molly Malone, a fictional character in the song, is a fish seller who sells cockles and mussels from her cart. The fictional Molly dies young from a fever, and is now commemorated with a statue in the centre of Dublin.

colour photograph of a statue of a woman.

The statue - erected in 1988 to celebrate Dublin's millennium as a city - is an artwork of sculptor Jeanne Rynhart. It originally was located near the busy shopping street Grafton Street, and later moved nearer the city's tourist office.

Rynhart was born in Dublin in 1946, and studied in both Dublin and Coventry in the UK. Returning to Ireland, she established a gallery and sculpture workshop.

Her artworks can also be found in other cities and towns in Ireland: a statue of Mary O'Connor (known as the 'Rose of Tralee') in Tralee, County Kerry, as well as two statues of Annie Moore - the first Irish immigrant to the United States - in Cobh, County Cork and at Ellis Island, New York. Rynhart died in June 2020.

1916 Memorial by Dora Sigerson Shorter

Glasnevin Cemetery in the north of Dublin is a large graveyard, with 132 acres. It holds the graves and memorials of notable historic figures from the history of Ireland.

colour aerial photograph of a cemetry with a large obelisk monument.
black and white photograph of a round tower in a cemetery.

One such memorial commemorates the Easter 1916 Rising - a sculpture by artist Dora Sigerson Shorter.

The marble sculpture is housed in a structure made of Irish limestone, and shows a man at the feet of a female figure.

white marble statue, a male figure kneels in front of a seated female figure.
colour photograph, a white marble sculpture under an arch behind railings.

The above two images are courtesy of the Statues of Dublin Instagram account

Sigerson Shorter dedicated the memorial to the executed leaders of the 1916 Rising which had deeply affected her - so much so than when she died two years later, it was said she had ‘died of a broken heart’.

In addition to sculpture, Dora Sigerson Shorter was also a poet. On Europeana, you can read two anthologies of her poetry.

black and white portrait of Dora Sigerson Shorter.

Father Mathew memorial by Mary Redmond

Several statues adorn Dublin's main street O'Connell Street. A memorial to Father Mathew now stands in the shadow of the 120 metre high Spire of Dublin (moved from a previous location on the street).

black and white photograph of a statue of a man in a city street.

The large sandstone statue commemorates Catholic priest Theobald Mathew who found and led teetotal societies in the 19th century, espousing abstinence from alcohol.

At its height in the 1840s, the movement enrolled 3 million people - more than half the adult population of Ireland at the time. Today, streets, bridges, churches and more in Irish cities and town bear his name.

black and white photograph, a statue on a plinth of a man with a raised arm in a city street.

The statue on O'Connell Street, which was unveiled in the early 1890s, was the work of Dublin sculptor Mary Redmond who had won a competition to design the memorial.

Redmond had studied in Dublin and Rome and was known primarily for sculpting portraits and busts. In the same year her monumental statue of Father Mathew was unveiled, she married and moved first to London and subsequently to Florence.

Thanks to Statues of Dublin | James Curry, Dublin City Council Historian-in-Residence