Thatches on show

Traditional Houses A fascinating collection of drawings of thatched cottages, made by students at the UCD School of Architecture…

Traditional Houses A fascinating collection of drawings of thatched cottages, made by students at the UCD School of Architecture in the 1930s and 1940s, is being shown at the National Museum's Country Life division, Turlough House, Castlebar, Co Mayo.

The exhibition, Whitewash and Thatch, includes wonderfully detailed plans, elevations and sections of vernacular houses in Ireland which - in stark contrast to their successors - were all built to fit harmoniously into the landscape.

The National Museum, the Irish Folklore Commission and the Royal Irish Academy sponsored the UCD student surveys by providing a small grant towards their expenses, with the aim of stimulating public interest in Irish building traditions. They first surveyed Lusk, Co Dublin, in the summer of 1943, camping in the grounds of the Church of Ireland rectory. Further surveys followed in 1944 and 1945 at Curragh, Co Waterford; Clogherhead, Co Louth; Menlo, Co Galway, and Curracloe, Co Wexford. The students' work is supplemented in the exhibition by drawings of houses from a previous decade by visiting Swedish scholars Åke Campbell (1891-1957) and Albert Nilsson (1904-1987), who were the first to study Irish traditional houses systematically.

It also includes a series of four pastel drawings by artist Seán Keating RHA (1889-1977), vibrantly illustrating the interior and furniture of a traditional house in Kishkeam, Co Cork. It is the first time that this series has been shown in public.

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Most of the featured houses no longer exist, or have been changed beyond recognition. The exhibition continues at Turlough House until October 15th and admission is free. There will also be a seminar on its themes

For details of the exhibit go to somalley@museum.ie

Frank McDonald

Frank McDonald

Frank McDonald, a contributor to The Irish Times, is the newspaper's former environment editor