The Great Book of Ireland


The Great Book of Ireland, a gallery and anthology of modern Irish art and poetry, was a project which began in 1989. The book was published in 1991 and in January 2013 it was acquired by University College Cork for $1 million.

Description

A huge volume of 250 pages of, the book brings together the work of 121 artists, 143 poets and 9 composers who painted, drew and wrote directly on the vellum. Calligraphy by Denis Brown to each opening serves to unify the book, which was bound in elm by A.G. Cains, Eamonn Martin and Gene Lambert of Mills Trust and Theo Dorgan of Poetry Ireland, who initiated the project in 1989.
All the contributors worked directly onto the large vellum pages, handmade by Joe Katz, and their work was unified by a calligrapher, Denis Brown, aided by design consultant Trevor Scott S.D.I. The Book is bound by Anthony Cains and housed in a box by Eric Pearce with a silver clasp by Brian Clarke.
The Book was a joint venture between Clashganna Mills Trust Ltd and Poetry Ireland Ltd. Business manager for the project was Eamonn Martin, and the editors were Theo Dorgan and Gene Lambert.
Clashganna Mills Trust is a charity that aims at dignity through independent living for people with disabilities. The Trust aims to convert an old mills complex in County Carlow in such a manner as to provide people with disabilities, and their carers, with a supportive, educational environment which will build creative and life skills, re-enabling those marginalised by society and equipping them with the skills necessary to confront the unacceptable in a spirit of dignity and independence.
Clashganna has undertaken a considerable building and renovation programme at its mills complex in County Carlow,. Poetry Ireland intends to build a national poetry centre with theatre and library facilities. Both organisations, while receiving public funds, are committed to a large measure of self-financing. Both recognised at an early stage the need for a bold, imaginative fundraising venture, which would provide a measure of much-needed capital.
When Eamonn Martin and Gene Lambert of Clashganna Mills met Theo Dorgan of Poetry Ireland in March 1989, what all had in mind was a project that would raise substantial funds while at the same time being a venture worthwhile in itself. Out of that meeting came the first tentative idea of the Great Book. Clashganna had previously produced a book, The Land of Punt, with paintings by Lambert and poems by Paul Durcan. This new book, however, would be very different.
The original idea was to create a handmade book of poems, on vellum, written and illustrated by a single artist. Within days, this had developed into a book with images by a single artist, in which the poems, perhaps 50 in all, would be written in their own hand by the contributing poets.
A significant shift came with the proposal that the book should be a dialogue between the communities of poets and artists in Ireland. Fifty artists would contribute - their images meeting the work of 50 poets.
Mushrooming as it went, the Book would eventually incorporate the direct contributions of 140 poets, 120 artists, composers, and a calligrapher. As the ground rules emerged, mutated and settled, the scope of the project became -to put it mildly -daunting.
Choosing the early contributors was deceptively easy: the big names, the exciting talents, almost seemed to declare themselves. But then, subtle shifts began to insinuate themselves:
What about artists and poets who had fallen silent?
What about artists and poets in exile, voluntary or involuntary?
Poets suggested painters to be asked and painters suggested poets.
The editors were faced with a bewildering range of choices, and advice was sought from all quarters.
Two rules became inflexible - no pastiche, no illustration. Outside those rules, it became a giddy rule of improvisation and inspiration, with chaos never more than one pace behind.
Driven back to the old manuscripts for technical guidance - and to the Livres d"Artiste of the early part of this century - the editors and contributors soon realised that the old canard, that there is no visual arts tradition in Ireland, is without foundation. The beginnings of Irish art and poetry find a triumphant expression in the early illuminated manuscripts, and the sense of recuperating an ancient tradition in a thoroughly modern idiom became one of the driving excitements of making the Book.
The technical problems were daunting enough in themselves. A pigment had to be found which would be flexible enough to accommodate a range of working practices, which swept from a delicate watercolour technique to something verging on impasto. Vellum had to be found in sufficient quantities and when a source in Ireland was identified, it promptly went into liquidation.
Fortunately, a management buyout by Joe Katz put Vellum and Parchment Works Celbridge back in operation. Vellum these days is normally supplied for orchestral tympani heads -sheets of the nature required for the Book had to be painstakingly and rigorously prepared by hand -and then artists had to face the nightmare of working, one chance only, on an unfamiliar surface, a living material which stretched and shrank as it was wet or dry, a subtly uneven surface containing minute amounts of natural oils.
The poets, scratching away with dip-pens on a surface pitted with microscopic bumps and hollows, found themselves writing with unfamiliar or half-forgotten implements on a material light years away from bleached, flat paper. The whole skin was used in each case, resulting in a book half as big as The Book of Kells again. Indeed, the sense of time on the project often induced near-vertigo, as the evolving community of makers rediscovered age-old techniques as well as an unexpected sense of a long-buried continuity.
As news of the Book began to filter out, artists and poets came forward with unparalleled
generosity to make their contributions.
It was often nerve-wracking - one poet is remembered for his nervous habit of getting up from his writing each time he completed a line and walking around until his agitation had subsided.
Artists would telephone at 2am in anguish at some technical problem.
The logistics of assembling the Book at times took on the genuine qualities of nightmare, but somehow the project went forward, no disasters, a few close calls and a mounting sense of excitement.
Meanwhile, parallel to the creative work, a great deal of financial ingenuity emerged. The original budget estimate was £25,000; this was to double, quadruple, double again as the full scope of the enterprise emerged.
Money and help came from sources including:
• An overdraft at the AIB;
• A grant and an interest-free loan from early backers, Dublin 1991 European City of Culture;
• A travel grant from the Swedish Embassy;
• A large interest free loan and a donation of £10,000 from Ulster bank which came when the
Book, almost complete, seemed permanently stalled.
• Total Communications came forward with assistance in the field of marketing and sponsorship.
• SKC offered financial and taxation advice.
There were times when vellum was being bought one sheet at a time, but somehow the project faltered ahead. Each page demanded to be treated as a totality - image, poem and calligraphy working together. Trevor Scott S.D.I. joined the team as design consultant, followed by calligrapher Denis Brown: these would provide the flow of continuity throughout the Book.
Working to the supervision of Scott, Brown provided the endlessly inventive scripts which lace through the Book. Pages shuttled back and forth across Ireland, over to Britain, Germany and France, to an artist on expedition inside the Arctic Circle; pages were brought to poets, groups of poets came to make their contributions; the pages accumulated, but pages need to be bound into a book.
Anthony Cains, a gifted bookmaker, is the Director of Conservation in Trinity College Dublin. A world authority in his craft, Cains would be the bookmaker. Master craftsman Eric Pearce would make the case for the book, and the display case too; Brian Clarke, jeweller, would provide the silver clasp for the box; the box itself, and the display case, in a nice touch, would be of wood from an elm planted by W.B. Yeats at Thoor Ballylee, with insets of Irish bog oak.
The ramifications of the project continued to spread, often in mysterious ways. Cains had been hoarding a Sardinian goatskin -a beautiful naturally cured skin acquired 25 years before when he worked on the restoration of manuscripts in the Florentine libraries after the great floods. This would be given to cover the Book.
Crann announced the news that the Thoor Ballylee elms had the Dutch disease - and made a suggestion that one might be used. Coillte identified a tree where the heartwood was intact and with the assistance of Ireland West Tourism a tree was procured and dispatched by Coillte to its kiln facilities at Dundrum for drying.
John Montague - in Paris to read from his work - persuaded Samuel Beckett to make his contribution.
Gandon Productions, on commission from RTÉ, came forward with a proposal for a documentary on the making of the Book, to be directed by Tony Barry.
Visiting poets from the USSR, USA, Romania, Czechoslovakia, the Caribbean and Italy were invited to contribute, their participation serving to underline the essentially cosmopolitan nature of Irish art and writing today.
From Britain, the Poet Laureate contributed two poems in tribute to the Professor of Poetry at Oxford, Seamus Heaney.
The Great Book of Ireland was accepted by the Dublin 1991 European City of Culture Committee as a central project, because it reflects the true wealth of the arts in Ireland, which lies in the artists themselves.
In recognition of all that he had done for the community of artists in Ireland, the then Taoiseach, Charles J. Haughey TD, was invited to become Patron of the Great Book of Ireland.
The artists, poets and composers whose work is contained in the Great Book of Ireland contributed their work free of charge.

Contributors

Poets

Artists

Composers

RTÉ, the national broadcasting service, commissioned a 54' film from Gandon Productions Ltd., to ensure that the work would be properly documented. Produced by Niall McCarthy and directed by Tony Barry, Pages for the Great Book of Ireland, with a specially commissioned soundtrack by Jim Lockhart, was broadcast on 18 March 1990. Amelia Stein recorded the first marks made for the Book, in a series of still photographs made when John Montague and Seamus Heaney inscribed their poems on 11 June 1989. Bill Doyle later photographed a typical working session.

Critical Engagement

In 2020, James Lawlor completed a Ph.D on the Great Book of Ireland. His thesis ‘A Cultural History of the Great Book of Ireland’ was supervised through the School of English University College Cork. It was the first major in-depth study of the Great Book of Ireland, a cultural initiative whose existence is not sufficiently well-known and whose significance is not sufficiently recognised within Irish cultural studies.