Browse Items (32 total)

Photograph of the February 1914Irish Review with plate by Sarah Purser
Frontispiece of the February 1914 Irish Review with plate by Sarah Purser entitled “A Kinsale Fisherwoman.”

Photograph ofHarry Clarke’s plate in the Irish Review
Plate for the July 1913 issue of the Irish Review by Harry Clarke. The plate “The Silver Apples of the Moon, the Golden Apples of the Sun” illustrates W.B. Yeats’s poem “The Song of Wandering Aengus.”

Photo of thePlaybill of the Irish Theatre in Harwicke Street (April 1915)for: Pagans by Thomas MacDonagh; The Walls of Athens by Eimar O’Duffy.
Playbill of the Irish Theatre in Harwicke Street (April 1915) for: Pagans by Thomas MacDonagh; The Walls of Athens by Eimar O’Duffy. Both plays were produced for the first time in 1915. Pagans will only be published in book form in 1920, whereas…

Photograph of the 1915 Irish Theatre playbillfor Uncle Vanyaby Anton Tchekoff
Playbill of the Irish Theatre in Harwicke Street (June-July 1915) for Uncle Vanya Scenes from Country Life in Four Acts by Anton Tchekoff. The play was performed in Hardwicke Street for six nights from 28 June to 4 July 1915. Checkov along with…

Photograph of the article by Shan Van Vocht (Roger Casement) in the Irish Review July 1913
Roger Casement’s article, ‘Ireland, Germany and the next War,’ was published in the Irish Review in July 1913 and presents possible scenarios for Ireland in the context of the Home Rule bill and of the growing European tensions. In the Review…

Photograph of advertising page for theIrish Review.
Advertising page of the Irish Review showcasing, among others, ads for MacDonagh's book of poetry Songs of Myself and for the Modernist magazine Open Window.

Photograph of the cover of theIrish Reviewlast issue
Cover of the final issue of the Irish Review spanning three months (September to November 1914). The subheading defines the Review as 'A Monthly Magazine of Irish Politics, Literature and Art'.

Photograph of the Irish Reviewcover for the first issue, March 1911.
Cover of the first issue of the Irish Review, March 1911. The subheading defines the Review as 'A Monthly Magazine of Irish Literature, Arts and Science'.

Frontispiece of the Irish Review (July 1912)
Hanna Sheehy-Skeffington's article about the Women's Movement in Ireland appeared in the Irish Review in July 1912, on the eve of her imprisonment following a demonstration of the Irish Women’s Franchise League in June 1912. As Maria Luddy documents,…

Photograph of the Irish Review frontispiece (May 1911)
Frontispiece of the Irish Review (May 1911) with a plate by Irish painter Norman Morrow entitled 'South Holland Types'. Norman Morrow (1879-1917) and his brother Jack Morrow (1872-1926) both contributed paintings in the Irish Review and were active…
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