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Geneva Window | Digital Companion

With this digital companion to the documentary The Geneva Window: Through a Glass Darkly, Ardal O'Hanlon guides us in a deeper exploration of the panels. 

Clarke's work contains panels depicting scenes from the works of Pádraig Pearse, Lady Gregory, G.B. Shaw, J.M. Synge, Seumas O'Sullivan, James Stephens, Sean O'Casey, Lennox Robinson, W.B. Yeats, Liam O'Flaherty, George Russell, Padraic Colum, George Fitzmaurice, Seumas O'Kelly and James Joyce.

Explore the window in detail with our interactive exhibit and watch our introductions to each panel.

Explore the window

A patriot's poetry and a mythical passion play

The Wayfarer

Pearse was a leader of the 1916 Rising and wrote "The Wayfarer" just before his execution; the inclusion of this panel would have been beyond reproach.

The story brought by Brigit

Lady Augusta Gregory's cultural nationalism is undoubted but were there reservations about her background in the Protestant Ascendancy?

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The Wayfarer | Patrick Pearse

The beauty of the world hath made me sad,

This beauty that will pass.

Sometimes my heart hath shaken with

great joy.....

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Shaw's "tragedy without villains"

St. Joan

As George Bernard Shaw had just been awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature, he may well have been seen favourably by the Irish establishment. Would it be enough to offset reservations about his biting wit or socialist leanings?  

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St. Joan | G.B. Shaw

Joan: O God that

madest this beautiful

earth, when will it be ready

to receive Thy Saints? How

long O Lord, how long?

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Synge's controversial play and O'Sullivan's poem in new light

The Playboy of the Western World

There is mischief in J.M. Synge's playboy but the scandalous pose is outshone by the colours used to create Harry's vision of the controversial play.

The Others

Seumas O'Sullivan's magical poem is innocent, in stark contrast to Clarke's imagining of the fairy and mortal characters.

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The Playboy of the Western World | J.M. Synge

Well, the heart's a wonder; and, I'm thinking, there

won't be our like in Mayo, for gallant lovers, from this hour today

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A fable alongside one of literature's most recognisable characters

The Demi-Gods

Winged angels descend on Ireland to cause havoc; a macabre and fantastic story imagined in a distinct Clarke style.

Juno and the Paycock

Joxer, one of the most famous and greatest characters in Irish literature, is given a realistic treatment in a scene of fantastic detail.

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The Demi Gods | James Stephens

The dark curtain of night moved

noiselessly, and the three angels

stepped nobly in the firelight

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Contemporary plays with controversial depictions

The Dreamers

Recounting Robert Emmet's doomed 1803 rebellion, this play is not a hymn to a revered hero but rather a potentially controversial depiction of a vain and impetuous leader.  

The Countess Cathleen

This Yeats play caused consternation because Cathleen sells her soul to the devil to save the lives of her tenant farmers.

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The Dreamers | Lennox Robinson

If I were to die tomorrow all I would ask

from the world would be the charity of its silence.

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The epicentre of the Geneva Window's infamy

Mr. Gilhooley

Probably the most controversial panel depicts Mr. Gilhooley observing a practically naked version of Nelly; the book and the author's controversial nature flows through the panel.

Deirdre

Russell's only play was based on the tragic Irish heroine of Deirdre of the Sorrows and her lover, Naoise; the panel seems to bear little or no relation to the dramatic work.

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Mr. Gilhooley | Liam O'Flaherty

She came towards him dancing, moving

the folds of the veil, so that they

unfolded slowly, as she danced.

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Sadness sits aside psychedelic madness

A Cradle Song

A dark-themed poem's depiction of the sadness of a poor peasant woman is contrasted with Clarke's imagining of the woman in a cloak of the finest brocade.

The Magic Glasses

In a setting typical of Clarke, the sadness of "A Cradle Song" sits aside the psychedelic and extraordinary madness of this Fitzmaurice play.

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A Cradle Song | Padraic Colum

Mavourneen is going from me

and from you

Where Mary will fold him in

mantle of blue!

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Taboo and humour in O'Kelly's story, and lesser-known Joyce

The Weaver's Grave | Seumas O'Kelly

A macabre while wryly amusing short story brought to life by Clarke, replete with humour and sexual tension.

James Joyce

Clarke may have thought about including Ulysses but it was already banned; were these lines from Joyce's poetry collection Chamber Music a safer choice?

Watch

The Weaver's Grave | Seamus O'Kelly

The widow thought that the world was

strange, the sky extraordinary, the man's

head against the red sky a wonder, a poem

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Explore further

Why has a beautiful artwork from one of Ireland's foremost artists of the early 20th century found a permanent home in a Miami museum rather than in the headquarters of the International Labor Organization in Geneva?

The Geneva Window: Through a Glass Darkly

This documentary considers how the artwork came about, the controversial aspects that led to the Irish Government demurring in accepting the commission for its intended purpose and the story of the window in the years after Clarke's premature death.

The documentary is presented by Ardal O'Hanlon and directed by Gerry Hoban, with co-funding by Oireachtas TV and Comisiúin Na Meán under the Sound and Vision Fund.

View video

Watch

Discover Harry Clarke's art

Harry Clarke is recognised as one of Ireland's most accomplished stained glass artists. He created more than 160 stained glass windows, most of which can be seen around Ireland and the world.

View video

Take a look at our map to find the locations of Harry Clarke's stained glass windows

 

With thanks | The Wolfsonian-FIU

Clarke's Geneva Window resides in Florida's Wolfsonian Museum, a museum that explores the inventive and provocative character of the modern world.

The Geneva Window: Through a Glass Darkly and this page use resources kindly made available by the Wolfsonian Museum. The museum owns the Geneva Window and all images are courtesy of The Wolfsonian FIU, Miami, Florida.

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