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The Eve of St Agnes
The Eve of St Agnes

The Eve of St Agnes

Artist (1889 - 1931)
Date1924
MediumStained glass
Dimensions157.5 x 105 cm
ClassificationsStained Glass
Credit LineCollection & image © Hugh Lane Gallery. Purchased, 1978.
Object number1442
DescriptionClarke achievements in stained glass can be credited with reviving a medium which had suffered serious decline in Ireland. In 1923, Harold Jacob ordered a window, 'out of the usual run of domestic stained glass', depicting Keats' poem The Eve of St Agnes. Clarke responded with a work of consummate skill, encompassing every technique known to the stained glass artist. Fourteen key scenes conveying the drama and magic of the story are illustrated, topped by two decorative lunettes, with a unifying frieze below showing the dramatis personae.

Porphyro, forbidden to pursue the hand of Madeline by her father, creeps into the castle during the St Agnes' Eve carousing and is led by Old Angela to Madeline's bedchamber. Madeline, following ancient custom, has retired there fasting to dream of her future lord. Her dreams are fulfilled when Porphyro wakes her, and the two steal away into the gathering storm past fluttering tapestry and the drunken porter.

Clarke cleverly disguises the leading in the architectural and decorative features around the scenes. The dazzling colour is achieved using double-layered glass, repeatedly acid-etched to produce diverse tones, with minute detail scratched into the paint layers using a needle. Thus, the window is the result of painstaking work of the utmost complexity, and an extraordinary achievement.

For further reading see:

Nicola Gordon Bowe, Harry Clarke: The Life and Work (Dublin, 2012)

Jessica O'Donnell, '"A Gorgeous Gallery of Poetic Pictures' Harry Clarke, Harold Jacob and John Keats's The Eve of St Agnes', in Harry Clarke and Artistic Visions of the New Irish State (eds. A. Griffith, M. Helmers and R. Kennedy), Irish Academic Press, 2018, 46-71

Jessica O'Donnell, Harry Clarke: The Eve of St Agnes (Dublin, 2012) ISBN 978-1-901702-42-2

Lucy Costigan, Strangest Genius: The Stained Glass of Harry Clarke (Dublin 2010)
On View
On view
The Magic Glasses
Harry Clarke
c. 1926
Michael Shorthall (Sculptor)
Christopher Campbell
1936
Cinderella Dressing Her Ugly Sister
Wilhelmina Margaret Geddes
c. 1910
Minnie Clarke
Margaret Clarke
1915-20
The Others
Harry Clarke
c. 1928
The Deposition
Evie Sydney Hone
c. 1953
Margaret Clarke
c. 1920
Study No. 2 for Miró
James Scanlon
1985
Untitled No. 7
Agnes Martin
1980
A Cradle Song
Harry Clarke
c. 1927
The Demi Gods
Harry Clarke
c. 1927