Creator:
Irish Virtual Research Library and Archive (IVRLA)
Date:
1701-1860
Type/Formats:
Collection — StillImage
Media type:
image/tiff
Contributor:
University College, Dublin. Library. School of Art History and Cultural Policy
Abstract:
Selection of 35mm slides from the collection of the School of Art History and Cultural Policy, focusing on the domestic architecture of eighteenth-century Dublin.The Irish Virtual Research Library and Archive (IVRLA) is a digitisation project launched in UCD in January 2005. The project was conceived as a means to increase and facilitate access to UCD’s cultural heritage repositories through the adoption of digitisation technologies. [ … ]
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Clements, Nathaniel
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributors:
Gardiner, Luke — Pearce, Edward Lovett
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Pearce, Edward Lovett
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Pearce, Edward Lovett
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Pearce, Edward Lovett
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Clements, Nathaniel
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributors:
Gardiner, Luke — Pearce, Edward Lovett
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Clements, Nathaniel
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Ensor, John
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Gardiner, Luke
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Castle, Richard
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Byrne, James
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Thorp, Charles
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
West, Robert
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
Ensor, John
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributors:
Gardiner, Luke — Pearce, Edward Lovett
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
West, Robert
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
West, Robert
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Slide
Contributor:
West, Robert
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Ensor, John, 1715-1787
Abstract:
Also known as Doneraile House. Built in 1753 to designs by John Ensor for the Hon. Hayes St Leger, later 4th Viscount Doneraile.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Gardiner, Luke, d. 1755 — Pearce, Edward Lovett, 1699-1733
Abstract:
The house was built by Luke Gardiner and leased respectively to Henry Boyle, Earl of Shannon. Design in part attributed to Sir Edward Lovett Pearce.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — West, Robert, ca. 1730-1790 — Whaley, Richard Chappel, -1769
Abstract:
No. 86 St Stephen's Green now forms part of Newman House (together with No. 85 St Stephen's Green). It was built for Richard Chapel Whaley from 1765. The design of the house and its stuccoed interiors are attributed to Robert West. A major conservation and restoration project undertaken in 1989-93. [ … ]
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Ensor, John, 1715-1787 — Doneraile, Hayes St. Leger, Viscount, 1702-1767
Abstract:
Also known as Doneraile House. Built in 1753 to designs by John Ensor for the Hon. Hayes St Leger, later 4th Viscount Doneraile.
Dates:
1776-1779 — 1776
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Stapleton, Michael, 1747-1801 — Hume, Gustavus, 1732-1812 — Leeson, Joseph, Earl of Milltown (Irish peer, politician, 1701-1783)
Abstract:
St Stephen's Green laid out as residential square by Dublin Corporation in 1664. Largely built during the first half of the C18. No. 17 built 1776-79 by Gustavus Hume for Joseph Leeson, 1st Earl of Milltown. Decorated by the Dublin stuccodore Michael Stapleton: drawings for the interiors form part... [ … ]
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributor:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy
Abstract:
House built on ground leased to James Higgins, bricklayer c1768-9. Formerly part of the Mount Eccles estate.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — West, Robert, ca. 1730-1790 — Whaley, Richard Chappel, -1769
Abstract:
No. 86 St Stephen's Green now forms part of Newman House (together with No. 85 St Stephen's Green). It was built for Richard Chapel Whaley from 1765. The design of the house and its stuccoed interiors are attributed to Robert West. A major conservation and restoration project undertaken in 1989-93. [ … ]
Dates:
1776-1779 — 1776
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Stapleton, Michael, 1747-1801 — Hume, Gustavus, 1732-1812 — Leeson, Joseph, Earl of Milltown (Irish peer, politician, 1701-1783)
Abstract:
St Stephen's Green laid out as residential square by Dublin Corporation in 1664. Largely built during the first half of the C18. No. 17 built 1776-79 by Gustavus Hume for Joseph Leeson, 1st Earl of Milltown. Decorated by the Dublin stuccodore Michael Stapleton: drawings for the interiors form part... [ … ]
Dates:
1739-1743 — 1739
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Clements, Nathaniel, 1705-1777
Abstract:
This was Nathaniel Clement's residence, built between 1739-43. Double-height stair hall.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — West, Robert, ca. 1730-1790 — Stapleton, Michael, 1747-1801 — Rochfort, George Augustus, 2nd earl of Belvedere, 1738–1815
Abstract:
Begun in 1765 and completed in 1786 for George Augustus Rochfort, 2nd Earl of Belvedere. Designs for the interiors are contained in the Stapleton collection of drawings in the National Library of Ireland. [ … ]
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — West, Robert, ca. 1730-1790 — Whaley, Richard Chappel, -1769
Abstract:
No. 86 St Stephen's Green now forms part of Newman House (together with No. 85 St Stephen's Green). It was built for Richard Chapel Whaley from 1765. The design of the house and its stuccoed interiors are attributed to Robert West. A major conservation and restoration project undertaken in 1989-93. [ … ]
Dates:
1739-1743 — 1739
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Clements, Nathaniel, 1705-1777
Abstract:
This was Nathaniel Clement's residence, built between 1739-43. Double-height stair hall.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Lafranchini, Paolo, 1695-1776 — Harman, Cutts, Rev., 1706-1784
Abstract:
Built c1756 for the Rev. Cutts Harman, Dean of Waterford. Now the St Stephen's Green Club. The decorative plasterwork is attributed to Paolo Lafranchini, given its similarity to comparable work executed by him at Castletown, Co. Kildare in 1759. This panel depicts the metamorphosis of Antigone by... [ … ]
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Ivory, Thomas, ca. 1732-1786
Dates:
1758-1760 — 1758
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — West, Robert, ca. 1730-1790
Abstract:
House built by Robert West, stuccodore and developer, on ground leased to him in 1758 by Usher St George. House sold in 1760 to the Hon. Robert Marshall, a justice in the Court of Common Pleas.
Dates:
1786-1810 — 1786
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributor:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy
Abstract:
Development of Fitzwilliam (now Pembroke) estate instigated by 6th Viscount Fitzwilliam from 1752. Leases for the south side were issued from 1786.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Pearce, Edward Lovett, 1699-1733
Abstract:
Design is attributed to Sir Edward Lovett Pearce. Plan and façade a close transcription of No. 30 Old Burlington Street, London, designed by Lord Burlington and Colen Campbell for Algernon Coote, Lord Mountrath. [ … ]
Dates:
1751-1757 — 1751
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Castle, Richard
Dates:
1776-1779 — 1776
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Stapleton, Michael, 1747-1801 — Hume, Gustavus, 1732-1812 — Leeson, Joseph, Earl of Milltown (Irish peer, politician, 1701-1783)
Abstract:
St Stephen's Green laid out as residential square by Dublin Corporation in 1664. Largely built during the first half of the C18. No. 17 built 1776-79 by Gustavus Hume for Joseph Leeson, 1st Earl of Milltown. Decorated by the Dublin stuccodore Michael Stapleton: drawings for the interiors form part... [ … ]
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Castle, Richard — Tyrone, Marcus Beresford, Earl of Tyrone, 1694-1763 — Lafranchini family
Abstract:
Designed in 1740 by Richard Castle for Marcus Beresford, Viscount Tyrone. Plasterwork in the stair hall is attributed to Lafranchini stuccodores.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Hume, Gustavus, 1732-1812 — Ely, Henry Loftus, Earl of, 1709-1783 — Stuart, James, 1713-1788
Abstract:
Residence of Henry Loftus, 3rd Earl of Ely. The ceiling of this vestibule is decorated to designs by James 'Athenian' Stuart, who had provided designs for the earl's country seat, Rathfarnham Castle, in 1769. [ … ]
Dates:
1739-1743 — 1739
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — Clements, Nathaniel, 1705-1777
Abstract:
This was Nathaniel Clement's residence, built between 1739-43. Double-height stair hall.
Type/Formats:
StillImage — Architectural photographs
Contributors:
UCD School of Art History and Cultural Policy — West, Robert, ca. 1730-1790 — St George, St George, 1st Baron Saint George, c.1715–1775
Abstract:
The house was built in c1760 for Usher St George, created Lord St George in 1763. The plasterwork is attributed to Robert West. Elements of its iconography derive from engravings after the French C18 artists Francois Boucher and Claude Audran. [ … ]